The silence in Sápmi - Munin

Transcription

The silence in Sápmi - Munin
Faculty of Humanities, Social Sciences and Education
The silence in Sápmi
– and the queer Sami breaking it
Ane Hedvig Heidrunsdotter Løvold
Thesis submitted for the Degree of
Master of Philosophy in Indigenous Studies
November 2014
The silence in Sápmi
- and the queer Sami breaking it
A Master Thesis Submitted by
Ane Hedvig Heidrunsdotter Løvold
Master of Philosophy in Indigenous Studies
Faculty of Humanities, Social Sciences and Education
The Artic University of Norway
Desember 2014
I
Acknowledgements
I first and foremost wish to give my thanks to the eight brave and inspiring
informants who made this thesis possible. Thank you for opening up and for
sharing your experiences with me.
I also wish to give my thanks to my supervisors Bjørg Evjen and Anna-Lill
Ledman for the constructive criticism and good discussions, and Marina
Pantcheva for proof reading the final results.
Thank you to all of my classmates from MIS 12, especially to Liudmilla Nikanorova,
Debela G. Amante and Ella Thora, for two amazing years together in Tromsø. It has
been a true adventure and I miss you all a lot.
Thank you Rachel Issa Djesa for always meeting the students with your open heart.
You are a true inspiration for all of us.
Thank you Audun, Maren, Cal, Aylin, Ranveig, Elfrida, Sara and Risten Birje. You
are all amazing.
And finally, thank you Fethawit for all your love and support.
Ane Hedvig H. Løvold
Tromsø, November 2014
II
Abstract
This thesis is an investigation of the silence of queerness in Sápmi, and is empirically
based on three fieldworks and eight interviews. The thesis will question the silence
within a historical perspective, and explore different aspects of the silence in Sápmi
today. The main focus will be on queer Sami in Norway, but will also voice queer
Sami from Sweden and Finland. I will therefore include a discussion on the silence in
the queer community in Norway, but the main focus will be on the silence in Sápmi.
My research will also look into what was revealed when the queer Sami in this thesis
break the silence. A central finding in my research is the impact of
heteronormativity’s position in Sápmi, and I will discuss two of the ideals that this system of norms seems to uphold, the masculine ideal for Sami men and the
Christian/læstadian ideal. The thesis will also look into the different strategies that
queer Sami use in order to break the silence and gain more visibility and acceptance
in Sápmi. One of the strategies is to mirror in, and identify with other indigenous
people who don’t confirm the heteronormative Western gender binary, like the twospirit movement in the US and Canada. I will also look into Stefan Mikaelssons’, the queer major of the Sami Parliament in Sweden, personal strategy to decolonize from
the masculine ideal, and the coining of the term “bonju” in the north Sami language.
Key Words: Queer Sami, Silence, Sápmi, Queer Theory, Heteronormativity,
Intersectionality, Two-Spirit, Decolonization, Visibility, Strategies, Bonju.
III
Table of Contents
Chapter one: Situating the field ..................................................................................... 1
Research questions ..................................................................................................................... 1
Key words in the field of study ............................................................................................... 2
The Sami People ..................................................................................................................................... 2
Sápmi ........................................................................................................................................................... 2
Queer ........................................................................................................................................................... 3
Queer Sami ................................................................................................................................................ 4
Non-gendered pronoun ....................................................................................................................... 5
Methods ........................................................................................................................................... 5
Fieldworks ................................................................................................................................................ 5
Interviews ................................................................................................................................................. 6
Informants...................................................................................................................................... 8
Positioning ..................................................................................................................................... 8
Reflexivity ...................................................................................................................................... 9
Different roles .............................................................................................................................10
Previous research......................................................................................................................11
Theoretical Framework ..........................................................................................................12
Queer Theory ........................................................................................................................................ 12
Intersectionality and black feminism ......................................................................................... 16
Thesis outline..............................................................................................................................16
Chapter two: Historical background ........................................................................ 18
Introduction ................................................................................................................................18
The Sami history in Norway ........................................................................................................... 18
Queer history in Norway .................................................................................................................. 21
Queer in a historical perspective in Sápmi.......................................................................24
Roles to fill ............................................................................................................................................. 24
Imagined communities ..................................................................................................................... 31
Summary .......................................................................................................................................33
Chapter three: The silence ........................................................................................... 34
Introduction ................................................................................................................................34
Fieldworks ...................................................................................................................................34
Fieldwork at Luleå Pride .................................................................................................................. 34
Fieldwork at Pride House, Oslo ..................................................................................................... 36
Fieldwork at the Queering Sápmi release in Umeå ............................................................... 38
The silence in the queer community ..................................................................................39
The voices in the margin .................................................................................................................. 42
The silence in Sápmi .................................................................................................................44
A silent people ...................................................................................................................................... 45
The silence as a sanction .................................................................................................................. 47
The silence in the margin................................................................................................................. 49
Summary .......................................................................................................................................51
IV
Chapter four: Breaking the Silence ........................................................................... 52
Introduction ................................................................................................................................52
Heteronormativity in Sápmi ..................................................................................................52
The masculine ideal............................................................................................................................ 53
The Christian/læstadian ideal ....................................................................................................... 56
Strategies ......................................................................................................................................58
Stefan Mikaelsson’s strategy to change “the masculine norm” ........................................ 58
Two spirits as a decolonization strategy ................................................................................... 61
Bonju ........................................................................................................................................................ 64
Summary .......................................................................................................................................67
Chapter five: Conclusive remarks .............................................................................. 68
While writing this thesis .........................................................................................................68
What did the silence hide? Implementation of theory and findings .......................69
Conclusion ....................................................................................................................................71
Appendix: List of informants ....................................................................................... 73
References .......................................................................................................................... 77
V
VI
“The only right thing is to come out and live as you are, even if it means losing
your breath for a while”
-Anna
VII#
VIII
Chapter one:
Situating the field
“Good luck in finding informants for that project, my friend. How can you do
research on a group of people that doesn’t exist?”
Two years ago, when visiting a Sami friend of mine, I was asked what I wanted to
write my thesis on. This was the immediate reaction I got when I answered that I
wanted to write it on queer Sami. I had been questioning the low visibility of queer
Sami myself, as my google searches had given very few results and I had only found
one academic article on gay Sami, dating back to 2002. Still, I was surprised by the
ironic comment of my friend, and the silence of queer Sami that this comment
indicated evoked great curiosity in me. The same autumn I also meet Stefan
Mikaelsson, the queer major of the Sami Parliament in Sweden, for the first time. This
happened at the Sami men conference in Tromsø, where he gave a talk on his
experiences of being a queer Sami man. In the lunch break, I went over to the Sami
president of the Norwegian Sami Parliament at that time. I introduced myself and
asked him if he knew of any open queer role models similar to Stefan Mikaelsson at
the Norwegian side of Sápmi, but he had no names to give me. This thesis will
investigate this low visibility and the silence of queer Sami at the Norwegian side of
Sápmi. Further, it will provide an additional glance to the Swedish and Finnish side of
Sápmi through Stefan Mikaelsson and other Swedish and Finnish queer Sami voices.
Research questions
This thesis aims to investigate the silencing of queerness in Sápmi, and the main
research question will therefore be the following: What is the silence in Sápmi hiding?
In seeking answers to this question I will also have three additional research
questions, which are the following: Has it always been this silent? Why is it silent,
and what are the aspects of the silence? What will be revealed when queer Sami
break the silence?
There are also several goals for my research. It is also a goal that the queer Sami in
1
this paper are seen and heard on their own terms, and that their voices reach people
both inside and outside of Sápmi. I especially hope that their voices can reach other
queer Sami as a source of empowerment and support. It is also a goal to contribute to
the lack of published academic research on this field. I also aim to make queer Sami
more visible through my work, and in doing so I hope that my thesis can contribute to
breaking the silence. The research focuses on the Norwegian side of Sápmi, as seven
out of eight informants are from Norway. I have aimed to include queer Sami voices
from all four National States in Sápmi because, as informant Anna stated, “we don’t
see the national boarders in Sápmi, we are still one people”. I have not succeeded in
meeting, and therefore not in voicing, queer Sami from Russia.
Key$words$in$the$field$of$study$$
The$Sami$People$$
The Sami people are the indigenous people of Norway, Sweden, Finland and Russia.
The Sami have been subjected to assimilation policies in all four countries, and their
current numbers are therefore debated (Hætta, 2002). Moreover, the numbers also
vary according to how one defines the Sami identity (Ledman, 2012). To be registered
in the Norwegian Sami Parliaments electoral register, one has to speak Sami at home,
have parents, grandparents or great grandparents who spoke Sami, or have parents
who are already in the election register1. There are also Sami individuals who fulfill
these criteria, but who don’t want to be in the election register, or individuals who
don’t fulfill the criteria, but who still identify as Sami. However, given the Sami
Parliaments criteria, one example on estimates number of Sami is between 35 000 40 000 in Norway, 17 000 – 20 000 in Sweden, 5 000 – 6 500 in Finland and 1 500 –
2 000 in Russia (Ledman, 2012: 67).
Sápmi$
!
Sápmi is both a geographical definable area and a term that can be applied on the
Sami people as an indigenous nation. As a geographical term, it often applies to the
northern areas of Norway, Sweden, Finland and north-west Russia, but as Hætta
emphasizes, it can be a problematic term to use geographically, as many Sami live
outside of these areas (Hætta, 2008). When the term is referring to the Sami people as
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
1!Sametinget.no!(03.11.2014)!
!
2!
a nation, however, it acknowledges the geographical variation of Sami settlement, and
I will use the term in line with this definition in my thesis. When referring to the
geographical Sápmi, I will emphasize this. Sápmi means Samiland in the North Sami
language, the language spoken by the majority of Sami. There are nine Sami
languages alive today, and there are therefore other versions of the term too, like
Sábme in the Lule Sami language, or Saepmie in the South Sami language2.
Queer
Queer is an umbrella term for the different LGBTIQ-identities. LGBTIQ stands for
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Intersex and Queer. Lesbians are women who
are attracted to women; gay are men attracted men; bisexuals are attracted to both
genders; transgender is an umbrella term for varieties of gender identities – for
individuals who don’t identify with the gender ascribed to them at birth or who define
themselves outside of the gender binary; intersex is a term for individuals born with
unclear genitalia, while the term queer is both a umbrella term for all these sexuality
and gender identities and an identity by itself for people who reject or identify outside
of the heteronormative gender binary. Queers rejects the gender binary ascribing
women and men specific qualities that give meaning in opposition to each other.
Queer is a critique of the binary way of thinking, which is typical of the Western
school of thought and culture (Lorentzen and Mühleinsen, 2006), but has been
criticized for reinforcing the binary thinking as the term is in opposition to
heteronormativity (Rosenberg, 2002). Heteronormativity is the dominant social
perception that all people are heterosexual, that they therefore engage in heterosexual
relationships, and that this is the natural way to live (Rosenberg, 2002: 100).
Heteronormativity operates within, and reinforces, the binary understanding of gender
rejected by queers. Heteronormativity therefore operates as regulative of the norms
connected to this binary; these are norms that tell us how to behave, look like and
relate to each other in order to be perceived as normal men and women.
My informants represent a wide spectrum of different sexuality and gender identities.
Some of my informants identify as queer, others identify with both the term queer and
other sexuality or gender identities. Only one of my informants, Mikke, who had gone
2
Sametinget.no (03.11.2014)
3
through a gender reassignment surgery, stated that he didn’t identify as queer anymore, but, as he put it himself, “going from a lesbian girl to a heterosexual man, I
still challenge the norms”. All of my informants have histories and identities with one
thing in common: they all challenge heteronormativity, and I will therefore use the
term queer as an umbrella term in this thesis.
The statement from this informant also underlines an important point for this thesis.
As the Norwegian word for queer, skeiv, often is used as a synonym for gay or
homosexual in Norway, a common feedback I’ve got from people hearing that I’m writing on queer Sami, or skeive samer in Norwegian, is that they assume I write
about homosexual Sami individuals. It is therefore of extra importance for this thesis
to underline that I am using the queer as an umbrella-term and not as a synonym for
homosexual. The term queer opens up for an inclusion of sexualities and gender
identities that are not defined by the two-gender binary system. The use of the term
queer in this paper therefore for instance makes it possible to include Sami individuals
who identify as heterosexual, but who may have a queer gender identity that does not
conform with the gender-binary system.
Queer Sami
Queer Sami are individuals with indigenous status as Sami who identify with queer
sexualities or gender identities. In 2009, a Fafo-report3 on lesbians and gays in Sápmi,
Lesbians and Gays in Sápmi – a narrative approach to explore living conditions, was
released. The report gives an estimated number on how many Sami have a
homosexual orientation in Norway. The report claims that there are about 3-5 percent
people with homosexual orientation in every population, and in regards to the current
adult Sami population, the number would make up about 1000-1500 people
(Grønningsæter and Nuland, 2009). This is the estimated number of homosexual
Sami, but if the report had included Sami with other non-heteronormative sexualities
or gender identities, the estimated number of queer Sami would be much bigger than
1000-1500 persons in Norway. The number would also be bigger if one would
Fafo is a Norwegian independent social research organization. The Faforesearchers conducts research and write reports on orders, both nationally and
internationally. The report on the gay and lesbian Sami was conducted on order
by the Norwegian government.
3
4
estimate the number of queer Sami in Sápmi.
The geographical Sápmi area is divided by four national states, but as informant Anna
put it when referring to Sápmi as a nation, “We don’t see the national borders in
Sápmi, we are still one people”. Seven of eight informants in this paper have Norwegian citizenship, and number eight is from Sweden. Finnish queer Sami will be
voiced in this thesis through the findings from my fieldworks, but there are no
Russian queer Sami represented in this paper.
Non-gendered pronoun
All of my queer Sami informants use the pronouns he or she, but there are Norwegian
queers referred to in this thesis who prefers the gender neutral pronoun they. This is
the English translation of the gender neutral pronoun hen in Swedish and Norwegian.
Individuals who identify outside of the gender binary often prefer gender neutral
pronouns, but I have also used gender neutral pronoun in this thesis if I haven’t been sure of what people identify with.
Methods
Fieldworks
This thesis is based on qualitative methods, and my empirical data has been obtained
through three fieldwork investigations and eight interviews. The method of fieldwork
has its roots in social anthropology. It is the anthropologist Bronislaw Kaspar
Malinowski (1884-1942) who has the honor of developing this qualitative method,
after he spent three years among the Trobrianders in the Trobriand Islands on Papa
New Guinea in 1915-1918, and broke with the quantitative method of the so-called
“armchair-anthropologist" at the time, who did their analyses based on letters and
notes they had received from travelers or missionaries (Hylland Eriksen, 1993).
Today, the method of fieldwork and the participant observation that it requires is not
only limited to the anthropological discipline, but in James Spradly’s words, it has spread like a quiet revolution through the social sciences and the many applied
disciplines (Spradley, 1980: preference) As Spradly so poetically describes it, the
ethnographic revolution has overflowed the banks of anthropology like a stream that
rises slowly, and then spills over its banks, sending rivulets of water in many
directions (Spradley, 1980: preference).
5
I have my background in anthropology, but my fieldwork differs from what can be
expected from an anthropologist in several ways. First of all, I have not conducted
fieldwork in a geographically limited place where I have lived among the researched
for a longer period of time. As queer Sami don’t live in a geographically limited place, I’ve had to travel to places where I’ve hoped there is a queer Sami representation, or where I knew queer Sami would meet, for my fieldworks.
Secondly, and as I will discuss later in this thesis, my positioning as a researcher
opened up for a more active role in the field. This position only allowed me to do
participant observation at my first fieldwork, where I actually did not meet any queer
Sami. Participant observation aims to observe social relations between informants, but
my empirical data and analyzes is mostly based on the spoken word, where the
discussions at my last two fieldworks and my interview lays the ground. My
fieldworks found place at the following places and time:
- Luleå Pride, in Luleå, Sweden, 12 – 17th of June 2013
- Pride House, in Oslo, Norway, 21-23rd of June 2013
- The Queering Sápmi release, in Umeå, Sweden, 20-22nd of September 2013
Interviews
James Spradley distinguishes between informal and formal interviews. Informal
interviews are spontaneous questions asked by the researcher at fieldwork, while
formal interviews are requested interviews that takes place at an appointed time and
place during fieldwork (Spradley, 1980). I base most of my work on the formal
interviews, eight of them all in all. They all took place at an appointed time and place,
but only one of them during fieldwork. I did, however, meet several of my informants
during fieldwork and made appointments to meet with them again later. The rest of
my informants I got in contact with through other channels. Through friends, I
established contact with several queer Sami, but only one of them said yes to my
request. I also got in touch with one person through the online queer website
Gaysir.no and another person I found through Facebook after reading about him in the
newspaper. The last interview that I conducted was conducted on request from a
journalist working for Gaysir.no. My article, a portrait interview of the queer Sami
6
activist Lemet from Karasjok, was published in November 2013 on Gaysir.no, but the
interview will also be included in this thesis.
The structure of my interviews was of the kind Chilisa calls the unstructured or nonstandardized interview structure. The unstructured interview starts with the researcher
asking a general question in the field of study and is usually accompanied by a list of
topics to be covered in the interview (Chilisa, 2012: 205). I had prepared a set of
questions in advance of my interviews and arranged them under the different topics
that I wanted to talk about. I brought the list of topics with me to the interviews, to
make sure that we had talked about all the topics, but I did not necessarily ask all the
questions I had listed. The list of topics functioned as support, but I got less and less
dependent on it. At my last interview, I did not even bring the list.
Chilisa writes that this kind of interview structure allows for flexibility and makes it
possible for the researcher to follow the interest and thought of informants, and the
interviewer should freely ask questions in any order, depending on the answers
(Chilisa, 2012: 205). As I tried to follow Chilisa’s advice and discovered that this allowed the informants to address their own concerns, something that also allowed me
to add new questions to my list as the interviews went on. Moreover, the structure
raised some challenges, as the unstructured approach often gave a more informal
framing of the interview, which could result in the interview feeling more like a
conversation between friends. As I discuss later, this led several times to me having to
negotiate my role.
The types of questions I asked were the kind Michael Patton terms descriptive
questions and opinion and value questions. When the researcher asks descriptive
questions, she asks the participants to talk about the social scene with which they are
familiar. The opinion and value questions are the questions that seek understanding on
how research participants think about the things they do and experience. (Patton in
Chilisa, 2012: 206). The descriptive questions were particularly helpful for me in
getting insight in my informants’ experiences of being queer in Sápmi, a social scene that I was not so familiar with in my capacity of a Norwegian researcher. The opinion
and value questions opened up for my informants’ opinions and explanations on these experiences.
7
Informants
Five of my informants are referred to in this paper by their real names. They are open
about their queerness, and have appeared in the media talking about it. Chilisa refers
to Wilson, who writes on the power that lies in revealing the names of informants, if
they allow it. Even if it goes against most university ethical research policies, Willson
argues that naming the informants creates accountable relationships between
informants and researcher, as the information can be tracked back to the concrete
informant (Willson in Chilisa, 2012: 121-2). The five informants with their names
revealed are open about who they are and have all appeared in media talking about
being queer and Sami. I have therefore chosen to refer to them by their real names, as
they have all agreed to it and as I find it important in terms of visibility. Three of my
informants also wish to stay anonymous, and two of them have been given
pseudonyms. The third is not quoted directly, and has therefore not received one. My
informants are the following persons:
- Stefan Mikaelsson, heterosexual and queer Sami Parliament mayor in Sweden
- Svein Henriksen, homosexual man
- Lemet, homosexual man
- Mikke, heterosexual man, who just transitioned from woman to man
- Chris, pansexual man, who is waiting for his ftm4 transitional surgery
- Andreas, somewhere between gay and bisexual, man
- Anna, lesbian woman
- Lesbian woman
Positioning
I have conducted my research and I am writing from the position of an activist
researcher. Activist research calls for the researcher to work from a non-neutral place
and to form political alignment with the researched (Hale, 2006). Taking this position
has therefore enabled me to involve politically in the field of research and with the
researched individuals. Chilisa writes that through involving the researched as much
as possible in the research process, the researcher should aim to work together with
the researched for change (Chilisa, 2012). Chilisa refers to Paulo Freire’s work, who 4
Female to male
8
emphasizes the importance of the activist researcher’s critical consciousness. Through critical consciousness, the researcher avoids to not just write about, but rather
criticizes, the mechanisms oppressing the researched. The researcher should involve
in political alignment with the researched, and with her work support and work
together with the research against oppressive mechanisms (Chilisa, 2012: 235).
Chilisa writes the researcher is enabled to empower the researched through working
together with the researched for political change, as this way of working opens up for
the researched to learn to perceive social, political and economic contradictions. This
also opens up for the researched to take action to change the way they think about and
do things (Chilisa, 2012: 235).
The position of an activist researcher enabled me to work actively with the researched
towards the goal of this thesis; to work for more visibility of queer Sami and through
this also contribute in breaking the silence. The position of a co-activist allowed for
involvement in the field, in particular during my second and third fieldwork: in Oslo,
I took initiative and led a panel discussion, and in Umeå, I participated actively in
discussions with queer Sami in workshops. I have not managed to stay in contact with
all of my informants after my fieldworks and interviews, but I have maintained
contact with several of them, and I have also discussed and verified data with them as
I have been writing. The position of a co-activist also enabled me in engaging people
from my personal network of people who work with queer politics in the field and
help in networking between queer Sami and people who works in queer politics. The
position of an activist also enabled me to publish an article for Gaysir.no, and I have
also given an interview about my project on NRK radio, in the local newspapers
iTromsø and Hamar Arbeiderblad, and commented an article on queer Sami in Blikk.
Reflexivity
Indigenous scholar Linda Tuhiwai Smith writes that “[w]e have often allowed our histories to be told, and we have become outsiders as we have heard them being
retold” (Tuhiwai Smith, 1999: 33). As a non-indigenous or non-Sami researcher, I am
an outsider in my field of research, and therefore need to bring Tuhiwai Smith’s words with me, to avoid that my informants feel like outsiders when I retell their
stories. Tuhiwai Smith also reminds us that indigenous histories often have been
retold by the condemning eyes of the colonizer (Tuhiwai Smith, 1999), and being
9
aware of the Sami history in Norway, I am therefore especially aware of my position
as s Norwegian while writing. I am an outsider as a non-indigenous person, but I am
also an insider, as I also share the queer identity with my informants. It is therefore
that I share experiences with queer Sami, that a non-queer Sami researcher would not.
Different roles
The political participation that the position of an activist researcher opened up for,
especially during my fieldworks in Oslo and Umeå, also affected my role in relation
to some of my informants. As I met and got to know several of my informants under
my fieldworks in Oslo and Umeå, I established a relationship with them at a social
arena where I had been visible and participated in the political discussions. When I
met up with these informants again at a later point for our interview, I discovered that
this had affected my relationship with several of my informants in terms of roles.
An activist researcher is also a co-activist, and this role had already been activated in
relation to several of my informants at my fieldworks. Co-activists share values and
visions, and I could therefore also feel the friendly ties that had been established with
some informants. The roles of a co-activist and friend can positively affect the
relationship in terms of trust, as it can be easier to trust and open up before a coactivist and friend, than it might be in the case of a researcher. When these roles are
activated during an interview, it can therefore be problematic and put the informant in
a vulnerable position, as one might give different information to someone you
consider a friend or ally, than to someone you relate to in the role of a researcher.
My interviews can therefore be divided into two groups. With the first group of
informants, a relationship based on my political participation was already established.
With the second group of informants, no relationship was established yet, as we
hadn’t met in person before. With the first group of informants I therefore often had to negotiate about my roles, to make sure that I was given information in the role of a
researcher and not a friend.
Wadel defines a role as the rights and duties connected to a status. Status is the social
relation between two people, like student and teacher, girlfriend and girlfriend,
boyfriend and girlfriend, mother and daughter, or researcher and researched. A role is
10
a status that is activated (Wadel, 1988: 70). The duties that are connected to roles are
preformed by expected behavior. By not confirming this expectations, it is therefore
possible to activate other roles. Behaving like expected by other roles can therefore
help in activating or in being ascribes these roles by others (Wadel, 1988).
Wadel further writes that social environments and social situations can also affect and
activate roles (Wadel, 1988: 71). The unstructured interview often made the
interviews feel more like conversations, something that could give the social situation
a more informal framing and therefore effect the role as a friend more then as a
researcher.
In negotiating about the role as a researcher I therefore had to act in line the expected
behavior of a researcher as much as possible, and to try to give the social environment
in which the interviews found place a more formal framing. When the unstructured
interview for example opened up for the informants to ask me questions back, or
when two of them started to ask me how the Sami friends we have in common were
doing, I tried to turn the conversation back to be about them. My role of an insider as
queer also opened up for some to ask me about my personal experiences when we
discussed queer issues.
I tried to behave like expected by a researcher, asking questions and taking notes, and
I tried to give the social environment a more formal framing by placing material
objects like a tape recorder on the table between us, having the list with questions in
front of me and a paper folder marked with “Centre for Sami Studies”. Still, I
discovered that the status of a friend was not so negotiable, and I have therefore been
extra careful with the material from these informants, and I have left out parts where
it is not clear whether the information was given to me in the role as a friend or not.
Previous research
There is not much previous research done on the topic of queer Sami, and the Faforeport states that this is just another example of the invisibility of queer Sami. It goes
on stating that in the field of gay and lesbian studies, queer Sami individuals seem to
have been “forgotten” (Grønningsæter and Nuland, 2009: 7). The same goes in regard
of gender studies and indigenous studies. The only academic article that I found when
11
I set out to do this research comes from the field of sociology and dates back to 2002.
This is Marianne Giertsens’ work “En minoritet i minoriteten – homofile i samiske
miljø og samer i det homofile miljø” [A minority within the minority – gay in the
Sami environment and Sami in the gay environment], where she writes about being
gay in Sami environments and Sami in gay environments. Giertsens has not done
fieldwork or interviews with gay Sami, but bases her work on Goffmans writings on
stigma, and in doing so she also presents strategies that she assumes gay Sami use in
order to avoid stigma. It’s also been brought to my attention that Anne Kalstad Mikkelsen recently has published an article on gay Sami, but as I got to know this at
the last phase of my research process, I have not used this article in my work. Besides
these two articles, a Fafo-report on the living conditions on gays in Sápmi, Lesbians
and Gays in Sápmi – a Narrative approach to explore living conditions, was
published in 2009. The report on gay and lesbian Sami was following up on the Faforeport on Norwegian lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans persons from 2008,
commissioned by the Norwegian governmental plan of action to “improve the quality of life for lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans persons in Norway, 2009-2012” (Grønningsæter and Nuland, 2009: 7). The report is based on interviews with eight
queer Sami, four lesbian women, one bisexual woman and three gay men, and it focus
on the different aspects of being lesbian and gay in Sápmi. What the two articles and
the report have in common is that they focus on queer Sami who don’t confirm the sexual aspect of heteronormativity, but does not mention gender identity. The book,
“Queering Sápmi, Sami life stories beyond the norm”, a book that tells 31 queer Sami life stories, includes queer Sami who don’t confirm other aspects of heteronormativity either, such as gender identities and polyamory. The book is the results of the
Queering Sápmi project, a project I will return to and elaborate on in Chapter 3, where
I present my fieldwork at the release of this book in Umeå, Sweden.
Theoretical Framework
Queer Theory
Queer theory will be the main theoretical framework of this thesis. Queer theory
should not be seen as one single theory in itself, but rather as a critical perspective
that unifies scholars from different academic fields who all share the critical view on
heterosexuality (Prieur and Moseng, 2000). Queer theory is centered around a critique
12
of heteronormativity, and as Kulick emphasizes, what all queer theorists can agree on
is that heteronormativity is the problem that should be explained, rather than the queer
deviants that it is producing (Kulick in Rosenberg, 2002: 87).
The word “queer” has its etymological origin in the English language. The term has
been used since the early 1500’s to denote individuals who are attracted by and feels a sexual desire for the same sex. Historically, the word has been used as a synonym for
adjectives like “deviant, unconventional, eccentric, worthless, false” (Bolsø, 2010: 56), but was reclaimed by the political activist group Queer Nation, who in the Pride
Parade in New Your in 1990 handed out flyers where they stated “We’re here, were queer, get used to it!” (Rosenberg, 2002).
It is the literature scholar Teresa De Lauretis who gets the honor of introducing queer
theory to academia. In October 1989, she participated at a film and videoconference,
arranged by the Film Archives in New York, where she heard the word being used.
De Lauretis was unaware of the political activism of Queer Nation that found place at
the same time (Bolsø, 2010). In February 1990, a conference for scholars who were
interested in engaging in queer theory was held at the University of California, Santa
Cruz. The conference resulted in a special edition of the Feministic Cultural Studies
journal Difference, titled Queer theory: lesbian and gay sexualities, and De Lauretis
was guest editor. The same year, the leading queer theorist of today, Judith Butler,
published her first book Gender Trouble and another central queer theorist, Eve
Kosofsky Sedgwic, published Epistemology of the Closet, two books that would
become very central and influential in the field of queer theory. Another influential
and central queer theorist, Michael Warner published Fear of a Queer Planet in 1993,
the same year that Butler published her second book Critically Queer, and the year
after she published Against Proper Objects (Rosenberg, 2002).
Queer theory grew out of the field of lesbian feminist theory and gay studies, but also
have its roots in French post structuralism. Michal Foucault has become one of the
most central thinkers in the field, even if queer theory appeared after his death (Bolsø,
2010). Through Judith Butler drawing on his thoughts and analyzing the relation
between discourse, knowledge and power, and through his book The History of
Sexuality, where he is analyzing the gender and sexuality categories that are taken for
13
granted and the instability in these, he is also keeping this central position in the field
(Lorentzen and Mühleisen, 2006: 139). Other influences from French poststructuralism are Jacques Lacans’ psychoanalytic models of unstable identities and
Jacques Derrida’s deconstruction of binary and linguistic structures (Lorentzen and
Mühleisen, 2006: 139).
Jacques Derrida emphasizes how Western thought and language are constructed
around the binary (Sandoval, 2000). Binaries are given meaning in opposition to each
other, and according to Judith Butler, the binary man and woman are given meaning
within the ruling discourse of what’s seen as feminine and masculine (Rosenberg, 2007). Judith Butler also emphasizes that gender is performed and repeated within
these discourses. This simply means that for Butler, gender is not something you are,
but something you do. According to her “no-one really is a gender from the start, it is
produced and reproduced within the discourses all the time”5. With this Butler also
emphasizes that gender is socially constructed (Rosenberg, 2007: 20). The gender
trouble occurs when a person who is born in a female body performs masculinity, or
the other way around, or when same-sex sexuality or relationships are performed
(Rosenberg, 2007).
The queer theoretical perspective aims to identify and deconstruct heteronormativity,
and through this to destabilize the heteronormative world order (Bech, 2003). The
approach acknowledges that norms connected to gender and sexuality are socially
constructed, but through its deconstruction and analysis, the queer theorist should
show how they appear as real in people’s lives. To do this, the queer theorist should identify, describe and analyze heteronormativity, and how it intersects with other
system of norms (Rosenberg, 2002).
An example of how the socially constructed heteronormativity appears as real in
people’s lives is when the norm-breakers are sanctioned. Heteronormativity can lead
to negative sanctioning for those breaking with it, and norm-breakers risk violence,
harassment, discrimination, and violation of human rights (Lorentzen and Mühleisen,
2006: 143). One is not only a norm-breakage from heteronormativity if one has a
5
Butler in Your Behavior Creates Your Gender, www.youtube.com (15.11.2014)
14
queer sexuality, but also if one in Judith Butler’s term does not perform gender in line with the ruling femininity and masculinity discourse that impose the ideal-gender
norms6. The ideal sexuality and gender norms are regulated by what Judith Butler
terms, “the heterosexual matrix”, this is the binary opposition of man and woman and the expected heterosexual relation between these two (Rosenberg, 2007). Judith
Butler refers to an eighteen years old boy in Main, New England, US who was
murdered by three classmates for his feminine way of walking – he had a distinct
switch in his hips, and says that “even a walk can be a dangerous thing”, you can even be sanctioned with murder7.
Adopting a queer theoretical approach to this thesis will entail an investigation of
whether heteronormativity has any connection to the silence in Sápmi, and in line
with Rosenberg’s words, identify, describe and analyze its position if I find it, and
how it intersect with other systems of norms (Rosenberg, 2002). It will also entail
having a critical approach to the Western binary thought. In doing this, I will also use
the work of different queer theorists and scholars with a queer theoretical perspective,
like Judith Butler, Jacques Derrida, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwic, Arnfinn Andersen and
Tiina Rosenberg.
As this is a thesis in indigenous studies, the work of queer theorists who write, are
applied in, or are written from the fields of in indigenous or native studies are most
preferable. There is however a lack of such, and I have found no Sami scholars or
scholars doing Sami-related research who engage in queer theory. There are,
however, scholars from the field of indigenous studies or native studies who
implement the queer theoretical approach in their work abroad, such as Chris Finley,
Andrea Smith, Scott Lauria Morgensen, Qwo-Li Driskill, and Daniel Heath Justice.
Their work has been very beneficial and highly valued for this thesis, and using and
referring to their work has therefore also been important for me in adopting a queer
theoretical approach for this thesis.
Butler in Examined Life - Judith Butler & Sunaura Taylor, www.youtube.com
(15.11.2014)
7 Butler in Examined Life - Judith Butler & Sunaura Taylor, www.youtube.com
(15.11.2014)
6
15
Chris Finley also calls for more native studies scholars to integrate queer theory into
their work. Finley writes that virtually no native studies scholars engage in queer
theory, something that contributes to a heteronormative framing of their work on
native communities (Finley, Smith, 2010: 1). Finley also argues that by putting native
studies and queer studies in dialogue creates further possibilities to decolonize native
communities (Finley, 2011: 41) and that that by linking native studies and queer
theory one can open up for more open, sex positive, queer positive and friendly
discussions of sexuality in both native communities and native studies (Finley, 2011:
32). As Finley also writes, “it is time to bring sexy back to Native Studies and quit pretending we are boring and pure and do not think or write about sex. We are alive,
we are sexy, and some of us Natives are queer” (Finley, Smith, 2011: 43). This thesis will show that there are also many queer Sami out there, who are alive, sexy, and
queer!
Intersectionality and black feminism
Tiina Rosenberg draws on Lindholm, when se asks if the queer theory is enough to
lean on when analyzing power and repression (Rosenberg, 2002: 100). Queer Sami
share their intersectional position with black feminists, and in Chapter 3 in particular,
I therefore also draw on the intersectional work of the black feminists bell hooks, who
writes her name in small letters, and Audre Lord. Intersectionality is a term that
originally was applied to the simultaneous impact of race, gender, and class on the
lives of Black women (Davis and Crenshaw in Marinucci, 2010: 130), but can also be
used for other groups of people that are suppressed by more than one power structure.
bell hooks’ terms “center” and “margin” have been especially efficient tolls for structuring my findings in analyzing the silence. hooks defines center as where the
privilege is located, while minorities are located in the margin. I find bell hooks work
very inspiring, as she her writings is focused on the power that is in the margin.
Thesis outline
The following chapter will give a short presentation on Sami and queer history in
Norway. Through the queer Sami voiced in this chapter, I will also investigate the
silence in a historical perspective. As these voices express that they feel connected to
other indigenous individuals who don’t confirm the heteronormative ideal, the 16
discussion in this chapter will also be raised to an international level.
The third chapter will look into the silence. I will start with a presentation of my
research process that led me to find the silence, and then a presentation of my
fieldworks will follow. I will then move on to discuss the silence of queer Sami in the
queer community, before I move on to a discussion of the different aspects of the
silence in Sápmi.
The forth chapter will investigate what will be revealed when the queer Sami break
the silence. The chapter will start with a discussion on heteronormativity in Sápmi,
and then explore two of the ideals that seem to supports its position, the masculine
and the Christian/Læstadian ideal. The queer Sami breaking the silence have also
revealed three of the strategies queer Sami use in breaking it and gaining more
visibility in Sápmi. The first is Stefan Mikaelsson’s personal strategy to destabilize the masculine ideal, the second is identifying with the two-spirit movement as a
decolonization strategy, and the third is coining of the term bonju to gain more
visibility in Sápmi.
Chapter five is the concluding chapter.
17
Chapter two:
Historical background
Introduction
There is a lack of written historical sources on queer Sami in Sápmi. As this chapter
aims to present the historical background of my field of research, it will start by
presenting the overviews of both Sami and queer history in Norway. Through the
voices of my informants and two contemporary Sami artist, one of them queer, I will
then move on to a discussion of the roles of queers in Sápmi in a historical context.
This will also be discussed and investigated through the empirical data from other
indigenous groups and the two-spirit movement in the US and Canada.
The Sami history in Norway
The Sami in Norway have been exposed for assimilation policies from the Norwegian
State. As the historian Henry Minde writes, by looking back at history, one can safely
conclude that the State's efforts to make the Sami put away their language, and to
change the basic values of their culture to replace them with a Norwegian national
identity have been extensive, prolonged and determined (Minde, Aas and Vestgården,
2014: 66). In 1848, the Parliament requested the government to carry out an
“investigation to whether it would be possible to educate the Lapps, especially those living in the coastal areas, in the Norwegian language, and to bring enlightenment to
these people” (Hætta, 2008: 44). This marked the start of what has later been termed
as the norwegianisation process – a process aimed at assimilating the Sami into
Norwegian culture and language.
Around the same time, a religious revival found place in Sápmi. The work of the
priest Lars Levi Læstadius (1800-1861) from Karesuando in Sweden marked the start
of a pietistic movement in Sápmi, that later became known as læstadianism.
Læstadius used images rooted in the Sami culture in his preaches, which helped the
Sami in relating to his words. Læstadianism soon became a socio-religious movement
among the Sami, and as they were dominating in numbers, it became known as “a 18
Sami movement” (Jensen, 2005: 26). In November 1852, there was a rebellion in Kautokeino, were Sami who were a part of this new religious movement whipped the
rector and murdered the merchant and the sheriff. The rebels were eventually
overpowered and the læstadian movement got more silent after this (Hætta, 2008: 24),
but it still stands strong as a pietistic Christian movement in Sápmi today.
Forced schooling of Sami children in the north became the main tool of the
norwegianisation process. Historian Henry Minde quotes his colleague, Einar Niemi,
as he writes “the school became the battlefield of the norwegianisation policy, with
the teachers as frontline soldiers” (Niemi in Minde, 2005: 7). Through this, the Sami children also became the main target for the assimilation policies, and removing the
children from their Sami speaking families and their culture to place them in boarding
schools was the main strategy. The boarding schools were especially widespread in
the inland of Finnmark, as this was an area where reindeer herding stood strong and
many Sami families therefore had a nomadic lifestyle. As the Sami children and their
families were moving with the reindeer herd on the tundra, boarding schools were
used to exert more extensive control than in the coastal area, where the Sami to a
greater degree were settled. In Finnmark alone, there were 50 boarding schools and 70
school rooms during the norwegianisation process (Hætta, 2008: 44).
Assimilation policies, and boarding schools for indigenous children as a strategy in
this, are a part of the Sami history that is shared with other indigenous peoples on an
international level. Jeffery Sisson writes that, viewed from the perspective of
indigenous people, assimilation was instead a separation, often violent – of kin,
people from their homes, people from their cultures and, especially, children from
their parents and families. Sami children therefore became, like many other
indigenous children, the particular targets of the assimilative separations (Sisson,
2006: 85-86).
In 1880, the teachers who taught Sami children were given an instruction that
manifested the aims of the norwegianisation process once and for all. The instruction
declared restrictions of the use of the Sami language in the classroom, both for the
teachers and the Sami children. The instruction only allowed the teachers to use the
Sami language if they evaluated it as highly necessarily to have the Sami children
19
understand a Norwegian word. After the introduction of this instruction, all Sami
children had to read and write in Norwegian. Teachers who could prove progress in
the Sami children's mastering of the Norwegian language got a wage raise. The
instruction was reinforced in 1889, now to fully restrict the use of the Sami language
in class (Minde, 2005: 14). The instruction now also commanded the teachers to
control that the Sami language not was used during recess. This instruction, aiming to
silence the Sami language and replace it with Norwegian was applicable to the late
1950s, and in some areas it was still applicable to the 1960s (Minde, 2005). The
instruction was central and regulative for the norwegianisation process, and when it
appealed, it had given results. Many individuals and families who once were Sami,
now considered themselves to be Norwegians, especially in the costal areas. The
process had also resulted in a stigmatization of the Sami identity (Eidheim, 1969).
In the 1970 and 1980, however, the Sami identity found empowerment through the
rise of a new political and cultural movement, called ČSV, short for Čájehekot Sámi
Vuoinnna meaning “Show the Sami Spirit”. Anders Guttormsen, the Sami man behind
the slogan, wrote that it also meant “Long live all that belongs to the Sami” (Bjørklund, 2000: 28). It was a time of cultural revitalization and political
mobilization, also at an international indigenous level, where Sami individuals were
also active in forming an international indigenous political platform. In 1975,
indigenous delegates from North and South America, Australia, New Zealand and
Sami representatives from Norway and Sweden met in Canada to work on a
declaration for indigenous people on a global level. Based on their shared histories of
colonial oppression, they declared that they would work together for the continued
existence of their peoples, and vowed that they would again take control over their
own destinies, and with that the World Council of Indigenous Peoples (WCIP) saw
the light of the day (Sissons, 2005: 22). The establishment of the World Council of
Indigenous Peoples also helped to pave the way for the establishment of the UN
Working Group on Indigenous Populations (WGIP), that was set up by the UN
Economic and Social Council in 1982 (Sissons, 2005: 22).
The ČSV-movement raised awareness of the harm done to the Sami culture and
people through the norwegianisation process, but also on the interventions still
happening in their indigenous homeland, the land of their ancestors, in the
20
geographical Sápmi. According to Henry Minde, the Alta controversy of 1979-81,
when the government planned to damn the Alta-river, became the symbol of the Sami
fight against cultural discrimination and for collective respect, for political autonomy
and material rights (Minde, 2005: 7). The Sami political mobilization gained support
from environmentalists and other allies, and their demonstrations got international
media attention.
The Alta affair was defined by the media as both a Sami matter and an indigenous
people’s matter (Minde, 2003: 101). This forced the Norwegian government to act, and in 1989 Norway was the first state to ratify the ILO convention nr.169, which
acknowledges the Sami people’s status as indigenous people of Norway, which gives rights to land and water (Minde, 2003: 101). The same year the Sami Parliament was
established8, and the Norwegian king, King Olav V, gave a public apology for the
harm caused by the norwegianisation process. Today, the Sami Parliament works as a
consultative body for the Norwegian government for funding the development of
Sami language and culture. Sami children today have the right to receive Sami
language lessons in the Norwegian school system. In the so called core-Sami areas in
the municipalities of Kautokeino, Karasjok, Nesseby, Tana and Porsanger, Sami is the
first language both in some schools and public institutions9.
Queer history in Norway
In 1969, a young woman phones the radio show “Partiene Svarer" (the Parties Answer) on the national radio station, NRK. She had told the producers in advance
that she had a question about agricultural politics, but once on air she asks the
representatives from the political party Høyre about their opinion on the penalty
clause §213, the paragraph in Norwegian law that criminalized homosexuality and
homosexual behavior between men. This is Kim Friele’s first appearance in media with her full name revealed, and by this she becomes the first publicly open
homosexual person in Norway (Rein Seehuus, 2009). At this point Friele was the
chairman for DNF-48, Det Norske Forbund av 1948, Norway’s first gay organization. She had been elected to this position in 1966, and she was the first female and openly
gay leader of the organization (Nyhuus, 2001). Friele and the work of DNF-48, today
8
9
www.sametinget.no (03.11.2014)
www.sametinget.no (03.11.2014)
21
known as LLH10, would come to hold a central position in the political battles and
achievements of gays and lesbians in the years to follow.
Homosexuality was decriminalized in 1972, when penalty clause §213 finally was
appealed. The work of Friele and DNF-48, and the pressure they put on the
government was central in this. The work of Kim Friele, DNF-48 and other queer
activists and organizations in the years to come has resulted in gaining several right
for people with queer sexualities. Homosexual behavior between women has never
been criminalized, but has been listed in the diagnostic manual of Norsk Psykiatrisk
Forening (the Norwegian Psychiatric Association) as a mental disorder for both men
and women. After pressure from Kim Friele and DNF-48 it was removed from the at
the annual NPF convention in 1977 (Nyhuus, 2001).
The decriminalization and de-diagnosing of homosexuality led to more and more
homosexual men and women coming out, and queer activism in the years to come
resulted in a legal protection against discrimination of homosexual people, which was
enforced by law in 1981 (Hennum in Andersen, 2009: 126). In 1993,
partnerskapsloven, a partnership law enabling same-sex marriage, was pushed
through, but homosexuals and heterosexuals did not have equal rights in terms of
church marriage, adoption of children, including stepchildren adoption, and the right
to assisted fertilization, before the law was reinforced again in 2009 to enable this
(Andersen, 2009).
Homosexuals and heterosexuals now share what Arnfinn Andersen calls sexual
citizenship, in Norway, meaning that homosexuals and heterosexuals have the same
rights and duties in relation to the State. These rights and duties ensure the
individual's participation and protection within the framework of the National State,
which are developed on the basis of democratic processes (Andersen, 2009: 123).
The queer history in Norway shows great achievements in regard to queer sexuality
rights, but there is still a long way to go in regards to queer gender rights. Norway has
received criticism from Amnesty International for the treatment of transgendered
Landsforeningen for lesbiske, homofile, bifile og transpersoner (the national
Association for lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgender people)
10
22
persons, and claims have been raised that basic human rights are being violated.
Transgender is both an umbrella-term and an identity in itself, and applies to people
who don not identify with the gender assigned to them at birth. Transgendered
persons who qualify to be diagnosed with F64.O, transsexualism, have received
gender reassignment surgeries through the public health care system in Norway since
1962 (Folgerø and Hellesund: 2009). To qualify for this surgery, however, one has to
match a criteria standard that confirms to the binary gender system. Transgendered
persons who receive this surgery can therefore often tell stores about “being born in the wrong body”;; they identify and feel like a boy but are born in a female body, or the other way around. This are stories that confirm the gender binary.
Transgendered persons who identify outside of the gender binary, who reject it or
simply don't confirm it, have less of a chance and no rights in getting access to the
surgery they need to have their identities match their bodies, or to be prescribed
hormones through the public health care system, something that Amnesty
International have criticized. Amnesty International has also criticized the forced
sterilization that transgendered persons must undergo in order to receive the
reassigned surgery that they need 11 , and the practice has been criticized by the
European court of Human Rights, as it violates fundamental human rights. As LLH,
TGEU Europe12 and ILGA Europe 13 writes in their report for the European Social
Charter and the Council of Europe that is administrating the European court of
Human Rights;; “it is of great concern to us that transgender people appear to be the only group in Europe, subjected to legally prescribed, state enforced sterilization”14.
Sterilization is required for transgendered persons to legally change their gender, and
to be recognized by the state to receive this legal gender recognition through changes
in the passports. One of my informants, Mikke, has gone through a gender
reassignment surgery and was recently interviewed by NRK, where he stated the
following: “When the ability to have children was taken away from me, I should at
least have been given an alternative. People like me should get the same right to get
www.nrk.no/norge/amnesty-kritiserer-norge-i-rapport-1.11519232
(23.11.2014)
12 Transgender Europe
13 Equality for lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and intersex people in Europe
14www.coe.int/t/dghl/monitoring/socialcharter/reporting/statereports/Comm
entsILGANorway2013_en.pdf (23.11.2014)
11
23
children, just as people who have not been through such a process.”15
The work done by queer activists, organizations and supporters has, however also
given some positive recent results. On January 1, 2014, the law against discrimination
based on sexual orientation was reinforced to also include transgendered persons 16. In
the summer of 2014, the Norwegian tax department also decided to introduce genderneutral national security numbers, something that was decided after feedback from
groups in society that wish for this to change17. The changes in the Norwegian tax
departments system will be implemented before 2030, when the old system expires.
Queer in a historical perspective in Sápmi
Roles to fill
“I believe that Sápmi was a much more open society before Christianity came and took over and sat more boundaries. Because there are very strict rules in the Bible,
to put it like that. That concerns gender roles too. So when Christianity was forced
on us, I believe that things took a bit different direction, actually. This is what I
think.”
-Mikke
“Before the missionaries arrived in Sápmi, I believe that we gays were associated
with the sacred. It is said that the noaidies, the Sami shamans, were gay. They had
aspects of both genders, they were both feminine and masculine.
-Lemet
The overview of the Sami history in Norway shows how governmental polices has
aimed to assimilate the Sami into Norwegian culture and language. Chilisa writes that
assimilation is a colonial strategy, and defines colonialism as the subjugation of one
www.nrk.no/nordnytt/en-bokstav-har-gjort-mikke-barnlos-1.11907585
(23.11.2014)
16 www.regjeringen.no/nb/dep/bld/aktuelt/nyheter/2013/nydiskrimineringslovgivning-trer-i-kraf.html?id=748269 (23.11.2014)
17 www.tv2.no/a/5754559 (23.11.2014)
15
24
group by another (Young in Chilisa, 2012: 9). So far, Chilisa’s definition is in line
with what this chapter has shown of the Sami history. Chilisa goes on to argue that
colonialism also involve loss of territory, accompanied with the destruction of
political, social and economic systems, leading to political control and economic
dependence of the West (Chilisa, 2012: 9). After two years at the indigenous master
program at UiT, I have noticed that the term colonialism is seldom applied to the
Sami in Norway, even if one based on Chilisa’s definition clearly can argue that the
Sami in Norway have been colonialized. I will leave this discussion here, as the main
point of this chapter is to underline the centuries of missionary work and assimilation
policies towards the Sami in Norway. However, when Mikke and Lemet talk about
how they believe that Sápmi was more open to queers before Christian influences,
one should also acknowledge the de-colonial aspect of such statements. Indigenous
decolonialism is connected to questioning or rejecting what one has been assimilated
into, and finding strategies to go back to what’s been lost under colonial rule (Tuhiwai
Smith, 2012). Although Mikke, Lemet and other queer Sami voices in this thesis talk
about how they believe things were different before the Christian influence and the
assimilation policies towards the Sami, I will use decolonization as an analytical
term in this paper, and will first and foremost refer to it in chapter four. The term will
also find its place in this thesis, as I also heard it being used by queer Sami at my
fieldwork in Umeå, and as one of my informants, Stefan Mikaelsson from the
Swedish side of Sápmi, also used this term himself.
Mikke says he believes that Sápmi was more open for both queer sexualities and
gender roles before the Christian influences. Lemet also connects queerness to the
sacred sphere. Before the missionaries arrived in Sápmi, he says, he believes that gay
Sami had their roles to fill in Sápmi, as they were shamans. Lemet shares this view
with the queer Sami artist Giert Rognli. At the annual Easter festival in Kautokeino in
2009, Rognli had a premiere on his short movie “the spiritual kiss”. In an interview with the queer online newspaper blikk.no18, Rognli says that he aims to throw light on
gay Sami men as a positive recourse in the Sami communities, because most gay
Sami men still hide their sexual orientation. He states the following about his fiveminute long movie:
www.blikk.no/index.php?option=com_k2&view=item&id=3897:film-omsamiske-homser&Itemid=10 (01.12.2014)
18
25
“ I am comparing gay Sami men before and now. In the old culture they were seen
as holders of a strong spiritual power, they were recognized shamans. The Sami
community has lost a lot along the way. Now, homosexuality is often a taboo,
connected to sin and shame in the Sami areas. We are not seen as good role
models."
-Gjert Rognli, in blikk.no
The Sami shaman is called noaidi. The old sources on Sami religion are written by
the early missionaries, who describe the Sami religion as based on an animalistic
worldview. Hætta writes that according to these sources, the Sami believed that the
stones, threes, lakes and the mountains had souls, and by offerings they could become
alive and offer their help and support. Several gods were also worshiped, and the gods
and their different worlds were drawn on the noaidi’s drum, runebommen. By the use
of rummebommen and the traditional form of Sami song, the joik, the noaidi would
reach a state of ecstasy and the noaidi’s soul would travel to the different worlds and
talk with the gods (Hætta, 2002).
Marianne Giertsen writes that she does not know of any sources saying that the noaidi
had queer gender expressions or sexualities, but that even if no known sources can
prove that homosexuality has been institutionalized and legitimized in Sápmi, it does
not mean that same-sex sexuality was not present in Sápmi (Giertsen, 2002: 14). The
earliest sources on Sami religion are written by missionaries, and as Indigenous Maori
scholar Linda Tuhiwai Smith emphasizes, indigenous history has often been written
by outsiders, not allowing the indigenous insiders to define their own history
(Tuhiwai Smith, 1999). She also draws on the feminist post-structuralism, as she also
remind us that history most often is “his-story”, and that indigenous history and early sources are written by men and therefore influenced by a Western patriarchal mindset
(Tuhiwai Smith, 1999: 29). Chapter four will return to a discussion of how such
mindsets can have influenced the missionaries behind these old sources.
There is a lack of old written sources that show that there has been room for queer
Sami sexualities and gender expressions in Sápmi. Through email correspondence, I
26
have been in contact with the Sami artist Britta Marakatt-Labba, who at her artist talks
often refers to an oral story, from Sami mythology, that she was told as a child. She
writes the following:
As a child, I was told that all children are one-gendered, until we start to grow. My
mother told me that sometimes the creator forgot to change the gender of a kid. So
if a boy grew up to look like a woman, or the other way around, while the inside
was screaming for something else, then the creator had only forgot to change what
was supposed to be changed. So people with different sexualities have therefore
always been the most natural thing in the world for me, as I was told what Sami
mythology said about it.
- Britta Marakatt-Labba, Sami artist
The quotes of informants Mikke and Lemet point out that they believe there has been
more openness for queer Sami before Christianity was introduced through the
missionaries in Sápmi. The quote of the Sami artist Giert Rognli suggests the same, as
he connects this openness to what he refers to as “the old culture”. Sami artist Britta
Marakatt-Labba, who is not queer herself, is explaining her acceptance of queer
sexualities and gender expression with Sami mythology. I find Lemet and Giert’s quotes particularly interesting, as they not only show that they believe queer Sami
were accepted in Sápmi, but they also believe they were connected to the sacred
sphere, that they were shamans. As Giertsen emphasizes, there are no written sources
on such appearances in Sápmi, but there are numerous examples of shamans among
other indigenous peoples with rather gender-fluid appearances. According to Giertsen,
what she calls “transgender qualities” has often been the criteria for shamans in indigenous communities. She lists the Native American Navajo, the Lango in Uganda
and the Mahu on Tahiti as examples (Almås and Pirelli Benestad in Giertsen, 2002:
14). Such appearances do not conform to the Western binary thinking with its
heteronormative ideal, and as this binary thinking often has framed the research of
Western anthropologists, such gender fluid shamans have often been described as gay
men. One example of this is the anthropological term “berdache”. It were coined by Western anthropologists, and has therefore been recognized within the field of
anthropology. The term originates in French and means “kept boy” or “male 27
prostitute”, and is therefore also highly offensive (Driskill, Heath Justice, Miranda,
Tatonetti: 2011, 5). I will return to the discussion about berdache in the following.
As the quote of Lemet and Giert shows, they believe there have been similarities to
this in Sápmi, that there have also been noaidies who did not conform to the Western
heteronormative binary thinking on sexuality and gender. Stefan Mikaelsson too
supports their believes. At our interview he said he had heard about similar
appearances among indigenous people in the circumpolar area. When asked if he
believed there have been similar appearances in Sápmi, he said: “Yes. I think it definitely has been. We’ve got so many similarities with the Arctic indigenous peoples around the circumpolar area, that I consider it unlikely if it was not found
among the Sami”.
“I definitely feel like I am a user, or a carrier of two-spirits. But at the same time I
don't feel like I have the right to take such a position, or to claim that I have such a
gift. You can’t just claim such a position for yourself; someone has to give it to you.
To claim such a position for yourself would be the same as to write your own
diploma that says you have a university education.”
-Stefan Mikaelsson
“ We, Queer Sami, should empower ourselves through going back to the history, to the world that had use for us, that had use for our special knowledge and special
vision, the special side of the two-spirit people who… are the key to the future, who can see more. We should find that heritage somewhere there, the heritage that is
buried under the Christianity, the long history of Christianity”
-Queer Sami from Finland
I first heard the term “two-spirit” or “two-spirited” during my fieldwork at Pride House in Oslo. At the panel discussion here, Elfrida Bergman, one of the women
behind the Queering Sápmi project, said that they encountered this term several times
while collecting queer Sami life stories for their book “Queering Sápmi – Sami stories
beyond the norm”. When asked by someone in the audience to elaborate on the meaning of this term, she asked the queer major of the Sami Parliament in Sweden,
28
Stefan Mikaelsson to answer. I was not given permission to record this discussion, but
as it became clear from the panel discussion that this was a term that Stefan
Mikaelsson identified with, I asked him about what this terms meant for him the next
day when we met for an interview. The quote above was his answer to this question.
The second quote is from my fieldwork at the release of the Queering Sápmi book in
Umeå and comes from a Finnish queer Sami who shared this in plenum at a
workshop, where I was allowed to record.
The term “two-spirit” is does not originate in any of the Sami languages, nor any of the other Scandinavian languages, but is a term that has it roots in indigenous cultures
on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean. As a term, it was coined at the third annual
spirit gathering of gay and lesbian Native American/First Nation people near
Winnipeg, Canada in 1990. It origin is in the Northern Algonquin dialect, and is an
English translation of niizh manitoag, two spirit, that indicated the presence of both a
feminine and a masculine spirit in one person (Driskill, 2010: 72). The term aims to
unite Native American/First Nation person who identify outside of the Western binary
thinking of gender and sexuality, but it is also a rejection of the anthropological
recognized term berdache. By coining this term to identify with, the two-spirits not
only reject the white anthropologists’ term, but also take back the right to define oneself on one’s own conditions (Driskill, Heath Justice, Miranda, Tatonetti, 2011: 5).
As the two-spirited Chippewa Cree Zachary Pullin writes, not only is the word
offensive, it also falls short in defining the diverse experiences of Native people who
weren’t of only male and female genders in their cultures.19 Zachary Pullin’s quote underlines an important aspect of two-spirit, namely the term as primarily centered on
gender and not sexuality. Pullin also writes that while sexual orientation describes
sexual relationships that one person of one gender has with another person, gender
describes the expected roles within the community. 20 Qwo-Li Driskill also emphasize
the focus on gender and states that two-spirit is primarily about gender roles and
gender expression, and not about what genders a person can fall in love with or be
sexually attracted to (Driskill, 2011: 102).
www.nativepeoples.com/Native-Peoples/May-June-2014/Two-Spirit-The-Story-ofa-Movement-Unfolds (03.11.2014)
20 www.nativepeoples.com/Native-Peoples/May-June-2014/Two-Spirit-The-Story-ofa-Movement-Unfolds (03.11.2014)
19
29
For a Western mindset, framed and centered by a binary understanding of gender, this
might be difficult to grasp. Judith Butler and her writings about gender performance
can therefore be helpful in understanding the term two-spirit. From a Butlerian
perspective, gender is acknowledged as socially constructed and as performed in line
with expectation connected to gender roles. Western binary thinking acknowledge
two genders, that of man and woman. The socially constructed roles of men and
women are performed and understood in line with the specific expected behavior that
is connected to these roles (Butler, 1990). There are, however, numerous examples of
indigenous communities around the world that recognize, or have recognized, more
than two social genders. These are indigenous understandings of gender that operate
outside the binary understanding of gender, and include more than two gender roles.
These roles are also connected to specific expected behavior, or in Butler’s terms, expected gender performances. This is precisely what the two-spirit critique
acknowledges.
The fa’afafine in Samoa is one example of an indigenous gender role outside the
Western gender binary. A fa’afafine is a third gender role, and McMullin define it as a
man who lives as a woman (McMullin in Diskril, Finley, Gilley and Morgenson,
2011: 85). This entails an expected gender performance in line with what is expected
of a woman in the Samoa community. Marianne Giertsen writes that the Navajo
traditionally recognized four different social genders, which entailed four different
gender roles that were connected to specific expected gender performance and duties.
Within the Western binary and heteronormative thought, these were women and men
who married heterosexually and women and men who married same-sex persons. She
also writes that Navajo who went through with same-sex marriage often were
believed to have supernatural powers (Nanda in Giertsen, 2002: 14).
Two-spirit is, just like the term queer, both an umbrella-term and an identity in itself.
Some two-spirits identify both with two-spirit and with tribally specific names, like
the two-spirit Navajo activist referred to in the Winnipeg two-spirit health report from
2010, who refers to himself by the tribally specific term n´dleeh when he interacts
with other Navajo and as two-spirit when interacting with other Natives that are not
Navajo. When he interacts with non-Natives, he also uses Western terms and then he
30
refers to himself as gay (Winnipeg Final Report, 2010).
Two-spirit is also a movement, consisting of two-spirit individuals, activists, artists,
scholars and their supporters. The movement both interacts and distances itself from
the queer movement, where non-indigenous queers with white privileges are the
majority. The two-spirit movement has its roots in the indigenous US and Canada
population, but my findings show that queer Sami also identify with this movement.
As the quotes above show, the Finnish queer Sami and Stefan Mikaelsson are both
familiar with, and identify with this term, while Lemet and Gjert Rognli clearly
identify with the intent of the term. Both queer Sami who use the term two-spirit hold
central roles within Sami politics, which entails traveling and participation in
international forums for indigenous people, which enables spreading such terms
through meeting with other indigenous people who don’t conform to the Western gender binary at these arenas. The queer Sami who don't participate in such forums in
person still belong to the international imagined community of Indigenous people,
and can identify with other queer indigenous people through it.
Imagined communities
The old Sami culture and their beliefs are very similar to those of Native American
tribes. I have read that some Native Americans look at people that are bisexual, or
people that are a bit different as… people who have a gift. They are more…what to say, open. They are resources in a way! So I believe it was quite similar among the
Sami.”
-Chris
This quote shows how Chris, like Lemet, Giert and Stefan, also mirrors himself in
cultural traits among other indigenous peoples. This should be seen in connection
with their membership in the international indigenous imagined community. The term
imagined community was coined by the American professor in political and historical
science Benedict Anderson. He writes that the imagined communities were created by
the invention of the book, which opened up for people to identify with and feel
connections to other people whom they never meet, and might never meet in person.
The connection and the membership to the community is based on a shared sense of
31
history that brings them together, or on sharing the same ethnicity or nationality, and
the community is therefore imagined (Anderson, 1983). The international imagined
indigenous community is based on the shared indigenous status of its members.
In the modern world of today, it is not only books that create platforms, for
indigenous people to do like Chris: read about each other and mirror oneself in one
another. Laurel Dyson writes that the indigenous participation and presence online
have increased significantly since the early 90s, creating space for indigenous people
to talk, share experiences and build networks through indigenous online forums.
Laurel Dyson writes that the indigenous participation and presence online have
increased significantly since the early 90´s, creating spaces for indigenous people to
talk, share experiences and build networks through indigenous online forums. (Dyson,
2011: 251). There has also been an increased growth in social arenas for indigenous
peoples to meet face to face over the last decades, which is also strengthening the
international imagined indigenous community. The creations of international
platforms for indigenous politics that have found place over the last decades have also
been important for the imagined community. Examples are WCIP (World Council of
Indigenous Peoples) and WGIP (the UN Working Group on Indigenous Populations)
that by the end of the millennium involved 90 indigenous organizations from settler
states, 40 organizations from Asia and 23 from Africa (Sissons, 2005: 22). Indigenous
international platforms for cultural exchange, like the indigenous Riddu Riddu festival
in Manndalen in Troms, Norway, where indigenous people can meet and share
experiences, are also important as they strengthen the feeling of togetherness.
The international indigenous imagined community creates opportunities for
indigenous people to mirror oneself in each other. This also enables indigenous
individuals who don’t confirm heteronormativity to mirror and feel connected to each other. The quote by Chris shows clear parallels to the two-spirit movement, even if he
doesn’t use this term himself. The same can be said about the other queer Sami voices in this chapter. This also opens up for questioning if queer Sami have been more
visible in some areas before Norwegian values were introduced through the
assimilation policies in Sápmi. As the quotes by the queer Sami voiced in this chapter
show, it might not always have been as silent as it is today.
32
Summary
This chapter has shown the short outlines of both Sami and queer histories in Norway,
histories that shows that both the Sami and the queer minority have fought to gain the
rights they have today. It also shows the missionary work that has found place in
Sápmi, and how the Sami has been exposed for assimilation policies from the
Norwegian state. The queer Sami voiced in this chapter believe that the silence of
queerness has not always been as present in Sápmi as it is today, and that queer Sami
was more visible in before the missionaries arrived and the assimilation policies was
enforced by the State on the Sami population in Norway. Some of the queer Sami in
this chapter also say they believe they have had their roles to fill, that they have been
shamans. Through mirroring in other indigenous people who reject the gender binary
and don’t confirm heteronormativity, like the two-spirit movement, queer Sami are
enabled to (re-) claim these spaces in Sami history.
33
Chapter three:
The silence
Introduction
Queer Sami have been invisible both inside and outside of Sápmi’s borders. This
chapter aims to investigate the silencing of queer Sami, with the main focus on the
different aspects of the silence in Sápmi. I will start with a presentation of my
fieldwork, and then move on to a discussion on the invisibility of queer Sami in the
queer community in Norway. This will be followed by an investigation of the
different aspects of the silence in Sápmi.
Fieldworks
Fieldwork at Luleå Pride
My fieldwork in Luleå found place in the period June 12–17, 2013. Luleå is a town
situated on the Swedish side of Sápmi, in the county of Norrland, with 75 000
inhabitants21. Before travelling to Luleå I had been accepted as a volunteer at Luleå
Pride, a rather new event, arranged for the second time that year. Pride is a celebration
by and for queer people, where people with sexualities and identities that do not
confirm the heteronormative ideal come together to celebrate and take pride in their
queerness. Prides are celebrated internationally, in countries all over the world, and
therefore serve to connect and empower queers on an international level. In
Scandinavia, the Pride celebrations are hosted annually in the capital cities, and in
recent years there has also been a growth of such celebration in smaller cities, such as
Luleå.
When I arrived in Luleå, I did not know what to expect, but I was hoping that
participating as a volunteer at a Pride celebration in the geographical Sápmi would
enable me to meet or get in contact with queer Sami individuals. I had therefore high
hopes for the Pride program, hoping that there would be workshops or discussions
that could be relevant for my research. Before traveling to Luleå, I had been in contact
with the girls behind the Queering Sápmi project through email correspondence, and
21
www.luleå.se (09.09.2014)
34
as it turned out that they also planned to come for the Pride, we agreed to meet and
talk about their work. But just hours upon my arrival, I received an email from them,
saying that they had to cancel their trip, leaving me with no safe appointments. I had
posted a request for informants for my project on Luleå Prides Facebook page in
advance of the trip that had brought no results, so I posted a new request. The
Queering Sápmi girls also posted a request on their page. All I could do at this point
was to wait for response, and hope that I would get in contact with potential
informants through my work as a volunteer.
My brother came with me to Luleå, and he also volunteered. The coming days we
socialized with other volunteers and participants, and thereby we got to talk to a lot of
people about my project. However, it turned out to be very difficult to get in contact
with queer Sami. I did not succeed in getting in touch with anyone before the very last
day, when I met a friend of another volunteer who had seen my request on Facebook.
This person gave me the contact information of a queer Sami girl that he knew, but
when I contacted her, she turned out to be out of town for the weekend. I had to go
home without succeeding in finding any informants; neither did I participate in any
workshops or discussion relevant for my work, as queer Sami wasn't mentioned at any
of the events that I took part in.
When returning home from fieldwork I first felt disappointed by the lack of findings.
But later, I realized that not finding any informants or queer Sami representation at a
Pride festival situated in the geographical Sápmi, is also a finding in itself, as it can
point to queer Sami being invisible both in the queer environment and in the
geographical Sápmi. However, queer Sami seem to have been more visible at Luleå
Pride both the year before and after I did my fieldwork. When I met up with the
Queering Sápmi girls at my fieldwork in Oslo a week later, they told me that they had
presented their project at Luleå Pride the previous year, in 2012. Stefan Mikaelsson,
the queer Sami Parliament mayor in Sweden, who also participated in the Queering
Sápmi project, also told me when we met in Oslo that he participated this year. The
result of the Queering Sápmi project was also presented at Luleå Pride in 2014. It
should also be taken into account that the queer Sami representation would have been
more visible at my fieldwork if it were not for the Queering Sápmi girls cancelling
their trip.
35
Fieldwork at Pride House, Oslo
At my second fieldwork, at Pride House, there was a greater visibility of queer Sami.
The fieldwork took place in Oslo, the main capital of Norway, June 21–23, 2013.
Pride House is also a rather new event, arranged for the first time in 2011, on LLH
OAs initiative. Pride House is arranged the weekend before Oslo Pride festival each
year, and Litteraturhuset, which hosted Pride House this year, writes on their webpage
“Pride House is Norway’s biggest arena for queer politics, and it represents the political gravitas during the Oslo Pride festival in Oslo.” 22 Litteraturhuset is the
biggest House of Literature in Europe, with five rooms suitable for workshops, panel
discussions and debates.
Pride House had focus on queer Sami this year, something that was marked by the
internationally recognized Sami artist Mari Boine preforming at the opening show.
Stefan Mikaelsson also held a speech at this opening, which he impulsively ended in a
joik, the traditional form of Sami song. This was also Stefan Mikaelsson’s, who defines as a queer man, first public performance wearing a dress. Seeing him on stage
preforming an emotionally charged joik, wearing a pink and black dress and matching
nail polish, while holding on to his little reindeer mascot, was a strong experience.
Both Stefan and Mari Boine received standing applause from the audience.
Pride House had both a debate and a workshop with focus on the situation of the
queer Sami. My position as an activist researcher opened up for involvement in this,
and I worked close with the leader of Pride House, Ranveig Igraine Stava, in advance
of planning the debate “What is the silence in Sápmi hiding? ”, a cooperation that I
will come back to later in this chapter. The workshop was on the Queering Sápmi
project, a presentation given by its leaders, Elfrida Bergman and Sara Lindquist,
followed by a conversation about their work with the audience. There was a clear
visibility of queer Sami at Pride House, but it was the invisibility and the silencing of
queer Sami that were discussed at the debate. My position as an activist researcher
also allowed me to lead this debate.
I was contacted by Ranveig at the preliminary stage of my research and was asked
22
www.litteraturhuset.no (07.11.2014)
36
whether I wanted to contribute with anything related to my research at Pride House.
Ranveig is an old friend of mine and they knew about my work, but not where I was
in the research process. I told Ranveig that I was still in the preliminary stage of my
research and that I struggled with finding academic work on queer Sami, but also with
finding information on queer Sami in general. We discussed this invisibility of queer
Sami on the phone, and Ranveig became very engaged and asked if I could come to
Oslo for a meeting.
The invisibility of queer Sami was something I started to reflect about quite early in
my research process. This was first and foremost because of the little amount of
information that I was able to find. In addition, I also discovered a recurrent theme in
few online media articles that had a clear connection to the invisibility of queer Sami:
the silence about queerness in Sámi communities. There was particularly one article
that got my attention. In the spring 2013, just before I traveled to meet Ranveig in
Oslo, Nordlys23 wrote about a homosexual Sami man from the inland in Finnmark,
Norway. He tells his story in this article, and it is a story about ostracism, insults and
about his Sami friends that turned their back on him when he came out as gay in
Kautokeino, Finnmark. Researcher Lenert Ketil Hansen, at the Centre for Sami
Health Research at the University of Tromsø is interviewed in the same article. He
participated in the work on a White Paper on Sami politics in 2008. It states, among
other things, that “the question of homosexuality is comprised of taboo and has to a large extent been silenced in the Sami community” 24 . This White Paper on Sami
Politics of 2008 also resulted in the Ministry of Children and Equality seeing the need
for a survey of the living conditions for lesbians and gays Sami, and the coming year
the Fafo report on the lesbian and gays in Sápmi was released. The Fafo report says
that it is striking how the queer Sami are invisible both among Sami and among
queers, and it goes on to say: “invisibility is an effective suppression mechanism. If
one does not even exist, it is difficult to fight injustice” (Grønningsæter og Nuland,
2009: 17).
At the meeting with Ranveig we discussed the article from Nordlys and this quote
Newspaper for the counties Nordland, Troms and Finnmark, in the north of
Norway
24 www.nordlys.no/nyheter/article6537158.ece (09.11.2014)
23
37
from the Fafo report. As Pride House is such a central arena for queer politics in
Norway, it is also a good arena to work for change, and breaking the silence here can
therefore be beneficial in increasing visibility of queer Sami. Ranveig and I therefore
started to work on the draft of what we were to discuss at the debate, and on putting
together a panel for discussion.
The debate “Hva skjuler den samiske stillheten?” (in English: What is the silence in
Sápmi hiding?) found place at Litteraturhuset in Oslo on June 22, 2013. The panel
consisted of six debaters. Ranveig asked the debaters in advance to define for
themselves from which positions they were talking from, to print it in the Pride House
program, and it was as follows: Sven Henriksen, playwriter, actor and
homosexual, Hagbart Grønmo, advisor for the Norwegian Sami Parliament, Stefan
Mikaelsson, the queer mayor of the Swedish Sami Parliament, Elfrida Bergman, one
of the leaders of the Queering Sápmi project, Arne Backer Grønningsæter, Faforesearcher, and Leammuid Lemet Ánde, a young queer Sami politician (NSR), and
then myself, Ane Hedvig Heidrundsdotter Løvold, master student from UiT, as the
meeting leader.
The silence was discussed at the debate, and it was all other than silent. The debaters,
especially the queer Sami in the panel, were very engaged and the atmosphere in the
room was emotionally charged. Two of the queer Sami debaters did in particular
show a temper and a directness that was far from the picture often drawn of the silent
and restrained Sami, and the representative from the Sami Parliament was grilled with
questions, both from his fellow debaters and the audience.
Fieldwork at the Queering Sápmi release in Umeå
My third fieldwork found place at the Queering Sápmi release in Umeå, in Norrland
county, Sweden, September 20–22, 2013. Queering Sápmi is a project that was started
by the two Swedish queer girls Elfrida Bergman and Sara Lindquist in 2011. The girls
have travelled around in Sweden, Norway and Finland to meet queer Sami and
interviewed them about their experiences of being queer and Sami. Their work has
resulted in a book with 31 queer Sami life stories, illustrated by Sara’s photography. The book release took place at Norrbotn Hotel, where they had invited all the
participants in the book, their friends and family, Sami and queer activists and other
38
political allies and supporters. We were all gathered at the hotel for the weekend to
take part in both social and political activities.
On Friday night there was an official opening of a photo exhibition with pictures from
the project and some tasters from the texts in the book. Speeches were hold and the
Sami artist Lovisa Negga performed. Saturday was a workshop day. After breakfast
we were all divided into small groups to discuss and map the needs of queer Sami. I
was put in a group with other academics. Before lunch the group was put together
with the group of Sami politicians and activists, to discuss our thoughts with them.
After lunch we were put together with the group of queer activists and “nerds” to discuss and share our thoughts with them, too. Then finally, before dinner, all the
groups, now four all in all, got together and presented their conclusions to each other.
The night ended with “the first queer Sami dance in history”. Sami dance, or samedans in Swedish, is familiar to most Sami as the term for a get-together where
Sami people come to dance and enjoy themselves.
The silence in the queer community
At the debate at Pride House, the silence was broken in the queer community in
Norway. Even if it was mainly the silence in Sápmi that was discussed, the invisibility
of queer Sami has also been striking in the queer community. After my meeting with
Ranveig in the shared locations of Pride House, LLH and Skeiv Ungdom in Oslo
center, I met a profiled person in Norwegian queer politics in the lunchroom. We
started to talk about my research, and they said the following;; “I have never
understood why it is so difficult to be Sami”. In Chapter 2, I presented a short outline of queer and Sami history in Norway, and
how both queers and Sami in Norway are historically oppressed minority groups. The
oppression of queers and Sami in Norway has been historically regulated through
criminalization of homosexuality and assimilation policies towards the Sami. These
laws and policies have been repealed, but the structures caused by them do not
disappear over night. Queers and Sami are still oppressed by the structures, something
that is visible through sanctions imparted by the majority, like stigmatization of the
minority identity. Arnfinn J. Andersen draws on Monro and Plummer as he writes;
“even if the political elite should wish to make changes in the legislation in favor of 39
the interest of a minority group, the changes are not valid if they are not perceived as
legitimated by the majority of citizens. The opportunities of the citizens are therefore
not equal, and minorities who challenge central norms and values, often experience
that their interests are pushed aside” (Monro and Plummer in Andersen, 2009: 124). As historically oppressed groups, both Sami and queers are what Chilisa refers to as
structurally oppressed groups today. By using this term, Chilisa underlines that the
structures that historically operated as oppressing still do (Chilisa, 2012). These
structures are visible through queers and Sami receiving sanctions for challenging the
central norms and values of the majority. Norwegian queers are protected by an antidiscrimination law, but still receive sanctions for challenging central norms and
values connected to heteronormativity. The Norwegian media can too often report
about hate-crime against queers, and “gay” is still the most common insulting word used in Norwegian schoolyards today. 25 The assimilation policies of Sami are
repealed, but a White Paper from the Norwegian Storting on Sami politics in 2008
could report that one out of four Sami have experienced discrimination because they
are Sami. It goes on to stating that “the legacy of the Norwegianisation policy still
lingers in people’s attitudes to a great extent, although public policy is revised. It is
therefore important to focus on issues related to discrimination against the Sami, both
personal and structural” (Stortingsmelding nr. 28, 2007-2008).26 It is important that
the queer movement is aware of the Sami history and the structures that still operate
to oppress Sami as a minority group. The quote of the profiled person in queer politics
points at a lack of awareness of the intersectional position of queer Sami, in the queer
movement and the queer political discourse. The lack of such awareness can also
serve as an explanation to the invisibility of queer Sami in the queer movement.
Intersectionality is a term coined in 1989 by the American law professor Kimberlé
Williams Crenshaw in her analysis of the invisibility of colored women in the
American legal system that structurally favors the privileged categories white, male,
heterosexual, Christian and wealthy (Berg, Flemmen and Gullikstad, 2010). The
intersectional critique has, however, roots back to the field of black feminism and the
www.skeivungdom.no (23.11.2014)
www.regjeringen.no/nb/dep/asd/dok/regpubl/stmeld/2007-2008/stmeldnr-28-2007-2008-/5/1.html?id=512866 (07.11.2014)
25
26
40
end of the 1970s growing criticism towards white feminists tendencies to emanate
from an unspoken, but specific white perspective (Carbin in Ledman, 2012). bell
hooks is a central name from the black feminism’s intersectional critique, and her book Ain't I a Woman?, published in 1981, criticizes the Western feminism for
excluding race as a meaningful category in analyzing and criticizing gender
oppression (McClintock in Ledman, 2012). hooks argues that, by excluding race as a
category, white feminists also exclude black women. Berg, Flemmen and Gullikstad
write that intersectionality is an analytical term that centers on the crossroad where
different roads of oppression meet (Berg, Flemmen and Gullikstad, 2010). When
applying this on hooks’ argument, hooks ask white feminists to acknowledge that
oppression of black and white women take different forms, as not only patriarchy
road, but also racism street cross in the intersectional crossroad of black women. The
intersectional perspective also points out the white privilege of white women, and also
that the lack of acknowledgement by white women emanates from an unspoken, white
perspective, and in reality is silencing the black female voices (hooks, 1989).
The silence of queer Sami in the queer community and queer political discourse, can
also be understood from the intersectional perspective and bears similarities with bell
hooks’ critique of the feminist movement. The Norwegian queer movement tends to emanate from an unspoken, Norwegian perspective. Emanating from a Norwegian
perspective can result in queers of other ethnic backgrounds becoming invisible and
silenced in the queer political discourse. The need of an inclusive queer political
discourse that acknowledges the intersectional position of queers with other ethnic
backgrounds has been debated and pointed out by the organization Skeiv Verden.
Skeiv Verden (Queer World) is an organization with a political agenda and platform,
which also arrange social events and get-togethers for queers with ethnic minority
backgrounds. The work of the political activists from Skeiv Verden has resulted in an
increased focus on the intersectional position of queers with ethnic minority
backgrounds in the recent years, both in the queer political discourse, but also in the
Norwegian media and society in general. Skeiv Verden’s important work has so far, however, not involved queer Sami. The leader of Skeiv Verden, Susanne Demou
Øvergaard, said at a panel discussion that she participated in at Pride House 2014, that
the main focus of their work is on queers with immigrant background, with a
41
particular focus on queer asylum seekers. After Øvergaard some moths later visited
Finnmark Pride, in autumn 2014, she said in an interview with Blikk that queer Sami
have much in common with the groups that she works with27. I contacted Øvergaard
and asked her to elaborate on this, and in our email correspondence she stated that the
similarities between queer Sami and the groups that she works with lies in having
different ethnic and cultural backgrounds from the majority of queers in Norway, and
queer Sami can therefore also face other challenges then Norwegian queers.
The voices in the margin
The discussion so far has revolved around the silence held by the queers who are not
Sami, but do the queer Sami communicate their Sami identity themselves in the queer
community or in queer setting? Or are queer Sami silent about their Sami identity in
queer settings too?
The only academic article on queer Sami I’ve found, Marianne Giertsen’s “En
minoritet i minoriteten – homofile i samiske miljø og samer i det homofile miljø” (A
minority within the minority – gay in the Sami environment and Sami in the gay
environment) deals with the three choices that gay Sami individuals have when
approaching gay or Sami environments. Giertsen draws on Giddens and Goffman’s definitions of minority groups and stigma. Giddens defines minority groups as a
group of people who share the experience of being discriminated, which results in a
feeling of community and of belonging together (Giddens in Giertsen, 2002: 12).
Members of minority groups risk being exposed for stigma by others. Goffman
defines stigma as what happens when a person’s characteristics makes other people discredit that person for it (Goffman in Giertsen, 2002: 12). Giertsen writes that gay
Sami risk meeting stigma both in what she refers to as “the Sami environments” and in “the gay environments”, and Giertsen presents three options to avoid this. The first option is located in the gay environment. When socializing here, undercommunicating of the Sami identity and communicating only the gay identity will
prevent stigmatization. The second option is located in the Sami environment. Here
the choice lies in emphasizing and only communicating the Sami identity. The third
www.blikk.no/index.php?option=com_k2&view=item&id=11739:frafestivaltil-festival&Itemid=164 (23.11.2014)
27
42
option is to communicate both of these identities when socializing in the Sami and
gay environments, but Giertsen also warns that this will increase the risk of being
stigmatized (Giertsen, 2002). Giertsen assumes that the gay Sami individuals will
meet more stigmatization for being gay in Sami environments than for being Sami in
gay environments. She has not done any interviews or research on this herself, but
writes that this is based on different sociological theories and her own experience of
being a lesbian (Norwegian) woman, living in Sápmi. She supports this assumption
by quoting an American study saying “Black, Jews and Hispanics are not thrown out of their families or religion at adolescence for being black, Jewish or Hispanics.
Homosexual adolescents are” (Benum in Giertsen, 2002: 17). As I read this, Giertsen is saying that one will not be thrown out from gay environment for being Sami, but
one risk being thrown out of the family or being disowned by Sami environments for
being homosexual.
Of my eight informants, none of them chose Giertsen’s option number one. Option number two will be discussed later in this chapter. It varies to which degree my
informants participate in the queer community, but when socializing with other
queers, none of the interviews with my informants show that they hold back on
communication of their Sami identity. They all seem to choose Giertsen’s option number three, not under-communicating their Sami identity. But as queer theorist
Judith Butler writes, deviants from the norms risk to be sanctioned (Butler, 1990), and
in a queer environment where being Norwegian is the norm, queer Sami risk to be
sanctioned with stigmatization. There is, however, only one of my informants whose
story tells about stigmatization in the queer community. This is informant Lemet, who
says: “I sort of always have to explain who I am in the queer environment”, and that other queers confront him with questions like, “Ooooh, are you Sami? Do you speak
Sami? Do you have reindeers?” Questions like this do, however, not prevent Lemet
from communicating who he is, but it makes him feel like an outsider, both in Sápmi
and in the queer community. He says: “In Finnmark, I’m not fully accepted because I am queer, and in the queer community it can feel like it is the other way around. I am
not truly home in any of the two places”. By this quote, Lemet confirms Giertsen’s
theory saying that queer Sami also risk being stigmatized in the queer community.
This is also in line with Butlers thoughts on sanctions, as being Sami does not confirm
the Norwegian norm in the queer community, and can therefore lead to queer Sami
43
individuals feeling excluded, or in Lemet’s words “not being truly home”. Lemet’s story also has clear parallels to the writings of bell hooks, who locates
minorities in the margin, in opposition to the majority in the privileged center. bell
hooks focuses on the power that lies in the margin. The margin is a place of refusal, it
is from where one can stand up and say “no” to the colonizer, and “no” to the suppressor (hooks, 1989: 207). It is also a place from where hooks encourages
minorities to say no to being forced to play the role of the “Exotic Other” by the majority in the center (hooks, 1989: 205). By being forced into the role of the “Exotic
Other”, the majority is “othering” the minority because of their difference, and by doing this, excluding them from the center. Norwegian queers are located in the
margin, in opposition to the heteronormative center. Queer Sami are located in the
margin of the margin, where Norwegian queers are located in the center. But not all of
my informants see the need to say no to the role of the “Exotic Other” in the queer community, and two of my informants actually talked about this role as something
positive, something that gave them positive attention. Both Andreas and Mikke told
stories about how they had experienced to be been seen as “exotic”, a word they both used, by queers when they had communicated their Sami identity. Andreas also went
to a gay bar in Oslo, dressed in his guakti, the traditional national dress for Sami men,
and says he only got positive attention and comments for his visibility as Sami.
The silence in Sápmi
At our interviews, my informants have been generally more concerned about their
experiences of being in the margin in Sápmi, than in the queer community. In what
follows I will look into different aspects of the silence in Sápmi, both in the center
and in the margin. Through my fieldwork and interviews I have found two main
aspects of the silence in the center, where Sami who confirm heteronormativity are
located. The first aspect concerns the expectation of not being confrontational in
Sápmi; the second aspect is the silence as a sanction that mediates non-acceptance and
ostracism from the center. My findings also show the presence of silence in the
center, where the queer Sami are located. Below I will also look into the different
aspects of the silence that is located here.
44
A silent people
“The Sami people are a very silent people. They communicate with a lot of subtext
and codes; they are not a very direct people. I have lost carrier opportunities,
because I am a very direct person, myself. I take the liberty to slam the door, and
you are not supposed to do that in Sápmi when you feel that something is wrong. I
let people know if there is something I don't like, and you are not supposed to that
either in Sápmi. And you should never say something directly to the person it
considers.”
-Sven
You don't want to be “in your face” to other people in a way that is confrontational.
It does not lie in our culture to be confrontational; that's at least how I have been
raised. It would have been confrontational if I flagged with the rainbow-flag from
the porch, and stuff like that.
-Anna
Well, it’s not only a question about this [queerness]. The silence is a cultural trait, which I believe comes from the process of norwegianisation. From early on,
through many years of norwegianisation, you were not supposed to think our talk
about everything, rather just silence questions to their death, you know, so they
disappeared. You were not supposed to talk about that you were a Sami. That was
the mechanism of the norwegianisation process.
-Andreas
What these quotes from the interviews with informants Sven, Anna and Andreas have
in common is that they all indicate an aspect of the silence of queerness in the center
in Sápmi; that not being confrontational is a norm in Sápmi.
Sven describes the Sami as a very silent and non-confrontational people, but this is far
from descriptive for Sven as a person. Sven, who is a professional actor and
playwright, is also a very active social commentator and through his blog he is highly
confrontational about both personal and political issues that concerns him. This
confrontational side of his personality is, however, something he has experienced to
45
be sanctioned in Sápmi. The leading queer theorist Judith Butler understands
sanctions as what is given to individuals who do not conform to the ruling norms, and
sanctions can therefore serve to point out these norms (Butler, 1990). When Sven is
sanctioned, in terms of losing carrier opportunities, for being confrontational, this
confirms in a Butlerian understanding that not being confrontational is a norm in
Sápmi.
The expectation to not be confrontational seems to be an aspect of the silence in the
center in Sápmi, but also in the margin. Anna’s quote shows that she is careful about communicating her queerness in Sápmi, and to be “in your face” about it to other Sami. Several of my informants also talk about how other issues, like sickness and
problems in the close family, are not talked about to others. Like informant Chris
says: “if someone in the family is sick, it is only talked about within the closest of the
closest of family”. Andreas understands this silence as a cultural trait. As he sees it, the roots of the silence lies in structures of the norwegianisation policies, structures
that forced the Sami to silence and under-communicate their difference. The
arguments of Andreas have clear lines to Harald Eidheim’s study from the 1960’s in a small fjord area West in Finnmark. Eidheim observed how Sami tended to undercommunicate the Sami identity, for instance by talking in Norwegian and not Sami to
each other when there were Norwegians near by, in order to avoid sanctions and
stigma (Eidheim, 1969).
As Andreas believes the silence has its roots in the structures of the norwegianisation
policies, he says that the silence does not necessarily mean that the non-queer Sami do
not accept the queer Sami. He says that it is not necessarily only about homosexuality
being such a huge problem in Sápmi, but about not taking the bigger debate about
these structures. But on the other hand, Andreas admits that he “meets himself in the
door a bit on that one”. This is a Norwegian saying that means to be confronted by
one’s own contradictory opinions. I met up with Andreas just a few days before the
panel discussion at Pride House, and he was well prepared to discuss the silence with
me, as he had read about the debate in the media. When I asked him if he planned to
come for the debate, he said that he wouldn’t, in fear of being recognized as “the gay Sami” by other Sami attending, a fear that made him “meet himself in the door”. Because of his profession, Andreas often appears in Sami media. Andreas expressed
46
his fear of communication of his queerness in public arenas like Pride House, as the
media then might start to ask him to comment on issues related to queer Sami. As he
put it himself: “I would much rather be recognized as a professional Sami than a
professional homosexual. Andreas would rather, in bell hooks terms, be recognized as
a professional located in the center in Sápmi, than in the margin. bell hooks
encourages minorities to speak up from the margin, but Andreas also admitted that if
he would change his mind and come to the debate at Pride House, he would not dare
speak up in public. Andrea’s fear of speaking up from the margin should be seen in connection with the silence in the center. If the silence in the center in Sápmi only
mediates acceptance of homosexuality and queerness, then Andreas would not risk
anything by attending or raising his voice at Pride House.
The silence as a sanction
“In Norwegian you have this saying that goes “the one who is silent agrees”. In Sápmi it’s the other way around”
-Sami classmate
This quote comes from a non-queer Sami classmate when discussing my research and
the silence in Sápmi in class. Seen from this perspective, the silence can be seen as a
form of resistance, a way to show non-acceptance. This way of understanding the
silence is in line with Stefan Mikaelsson experiences with the silence from the center.
At the debate at Pride House, he expressed that he experienced the silence he was met
with by the non-queer Sami as a way of not showing their acceptance. At our
interview, he talked more about his experiences of his queerness being silenced by
other Sami, especially by other Sami men. As he said, “only some very few men have
commented it, but the Sami women more often express that they like it”. Stefan’s
queerness is often very visible through, in Judith Butlers terms, the way he is doing
his gender (Butler: 1990). Stefan, who identifies as a queer heterosexual man, does
not dress in accordance with what is expected by a Sami man. She has attended Sami
Parliamentary Sessions and other public platforms for Sami politics, wearing what he
calls “feminine attributes” to his guakti. Guakti is the Sami national dress, and the
Sami men are expected to wear pants to the guakti, preferably made of reindeer skin.
Stefan Mikaelsson wears stockings, and he paints his nails with nail polish. With his
47
gender appearance, Stefan is challenging the Sami man’s role, a role that he is
experiencing as “to tight”, with too little room for “feminine expression”. Gender expressions that do not confirm the expectations connected to the gender binary, are
challenging heteronormativity, and Stefan is sanctioned for it with silence from the
center, something that also points out the ruling position of heteronormativity in
Sápmi.
Silence is also a way for the center to maintain its power relation to the margin. bell
hooks, shares the intersectional position of queer Sami, as she writes from the position
of a black woman. hooks writes that “everywhere we go there is pressure to silence our voices, to co-opt and undermine them” (hooks, 1989: 205-6). The silence in the
center in Sápmi can also undermine the queer Sami voices. Silence contributes to
homosexuality not being articulated (Rosenberg, 2002: 118). The Fafo report states
that the silence can result in the queer Sami lacking the words they need to describe
their feelings and to articulate and understand who they are (Grønningsæter and
Nuland, 2009: 17). For an individual who lacks the words to acknowledge one’s queerness, the process of acknowledging it and of coming out of the closet can also
take more time than for those who have the vocabulary for it. Queer theorists Eve
Kosofsky Sedgwick writes about the invention of the closet in her book “The Epistemology of the Closet”. According to Sedgwick, it is mandatory for every homosexual to come out from the closet, and this is due to the power relation between
the homosexual margin and the heterosexual center. Through the silence and
ignorance in the center, the closet maintains its mandatory position, as silence and
ignorance is the most efficient weapon to keep the heterosexual cultural domination
stabile (Sedgwick in Rosenberg, 2002: 96). Queer theorist Tiina Rosenberg comments
on Sedgwick’s work, and writes that “to see the silence as openness is preposterous,
as the silence simply expresses lack of will and ability to take a nuanced discussion
about sexuality” (Rosenberg, 2002: 96). Several of my informants talked about
coming out of the closet, and the position of the closet is also mandatory in Sápmi.
The existence of the closet is supported by the silence in the center, and can prevent
queer Sami from coming out from it. For the queer Sami who are out of the closet, the
silence can be experienced as a sanction, which mediates non-acceptance, exclusion
and ostracism. As the Fafo report also states, the exclusion is often indirectly
mediated through the silence (Grønningsæter and Nuland, 2009: 74).
48
The silence in the margin
We need more queer Sami who dare to be open about who they are. They need to
dare more. I know about many, many gay Sami. The kind that comes crawling up to
you and confides on your arm at 2am and says “Yes, now listen…” and I’m just
like “You don’t have to say anything, I know”, and then they answer “Oh, I wish I could come out too”. Then I say;; “Yes, I understand it is difficult. You are married,
you have kids and a house and….”. Well, it’s not that easy for some people. We
who don’t have it like that are blessed. We are very lucky. I don't think we really
understand how difficult it can be for some people.
-Sven
The silence is not only located in the center in Sápmi, but also in the margin. As Sven
says, he knows about many gay Sami who are completely silent about their queerness,
who are still in the closet. All of my informants are out of the closet, but some are
more careful about communicating their queerness in Sápmi. The previous discussion
on the silence in the queer community showed that none of my informants undercommunicate their Sami identity in queer environments. In the Sami environments
however, the stories of my informants show that they more often choose the second of
Giertsen’s three options in avoiding stigma, and under-communicate their queer
identities. The case of Andreas, who’s been to a gay bar in Oslo in his guakti, but who
avoids participating at Pride House in fear of being recognized by other Sami
exemplify this. Some of my informants, like Andreas, say that they don’t spend much time in the queer environments. As he puts it himself, he doesn’t hang out much in queer environments, but he hangs out with some of his gay friends every now and
then. It looks like Andreas shares this view with several of my informants, as only
two out of eight emphasize that they spend time in queer environments, and these two
referred to the queer communities in Oslo and Tromsø. While the Sami identity
connects the queer Sami to their families, ancestors and cultural heritage, the queer
identity connects them to friends, partners and lovers. Different risks are therefore at
stake when the queer Sami communicate their queerness in Sápmi than when they
communicate Sami identity in queer environments, something that should be taken
into account when discussing the silence in the margin. Through stigmatization or
sanctions from their families, and in the worst by case being disowned, something one
49
of my informants experienced when coming out to them, the risk is also there to lose
the connection to their culture.
The silence in the margin in Sápmi can be seen in connection with the expectation not
to be confrontational, but it should first and foremost be seen in connection with the
sanctions that the queer Sami risk to receive when the confront the center with their
queerness. At the discussion at Pride House, one of the queer Sami in the panel,
Lemet, gave several examples of sanctions given to him and other queer Sami for
communicating their queerness. Lemet’s stories were not much about being
sanctioned through and with silence, but about sanctions in more physical and verbal
forms. He told us about queer Sami who have been both physically and verbally
insulted by non-queer Sami who have power positions in Sápmi; he also shared his
own experiences. In the interview I did with him for Gaysir.no he tells that he was the
first openly gay in his village, Karasjok in inner Finnmark, and that he has been
sanctioned for being open there on a daily level. He says: “In Karasjok, I have been
spat at, poured coffee, beer and drinks on, and I have received verbal abuse and death
threats”. As a result of all the sanction he had to move to Oslo. “In many ways, I feel
like I had to move to Oslo to seek asylum”.
The sanctions that queer Sami risk receiving from the center, both through silence and
in more physical and verbal forms, should be seen in connection with the silence in
the margin. This applies both to queer Sami who chose to under-communicate their
silence, and for those who are completely silent, those who are still in the closet. Sven
says he knows about many gay Sami who are still in the closet. A great number of the
queer Sami who tell their stories in the Queering Sápmi book, 10 out of 31, are also
anonymous and some of them still in the closet, something that points out how many
queer Sami are completely silent about their queerness. As Sven’s quote shows, there is a need for more open queer Sami who dare to speak up from the margin. This was
also a need addressed by several of my informants, and also a central concern that
was discussed at the Queering Sápmi release in Umeå. The queer Sami who dare to
speak up from the margin are important role models for those who don’t, as this can help the silent ones to also break the silence.
Another black feminist who writes from the margin is the poet Audre Lorde. She
50
writes from the intersectional position as black queer women, asking those in the
margin to dare to speak up, to dare to communicate who they are. She is asking the
margin to transform the silence into language and action. She writes that, in the case
of silence, each of us draws a face of her own fear, -fear of contempt, of censure, of
some judgment, or recognition, of challenge, of annihilation. But most of all, I think,
we fear the visibility without which we cannot truly live (Lorde in Ryan, 2001: 82).
She is asking the silent ones to dare to be visible with the difference, and she writes
that we can sit in our safe corners, mute as bottles, and we will still be no less afraid.
The visibility is what makes us most vulnerable, but it is also the source of our
greatest strength (Lorde in Ryan, 2001: 82).
Summary
This chapter has shown that the silence is present both in the queer community and in
Sápmi. However, the silence seems to be much more present in the margin in Sápmi
than in the queer community. There are several aspects of the silence in Sápmi. It can
be seen as a cultural trait, a trait which one of my informants in particular see and
underlines as enforced and as a result of the norwegianisation policies. Not being
confrontational in Sápmi seems to be a expectation, and there are also other topics one
are not supposed to concern others with, like sickness. However, this also points to
that queerness is something to be confrontational about. The silence from the center in
Sápmi mediates non-acceptance and ostracism, and should therefore also be seen as a
sanction in itself. There are also stories about more physical, verbal and violent
sanctions that queer Sami has received for being queer, something that also points out
the central position of heteronormativity in Sápmi.
51
Chapter four:
Breaking the Silence
Introduction
This chapter will look into what was revealed when the queer Sami broke the silence.
The previous chapter pointed out the central position of heteronormativity in Sápmi,
and through the queer Sami who broke the silence at my fieldworks and interviews,
two ideals that in particular are supported by heteronormativity has been revealed.
This is the masculine ideal for Sami men and the Christian/læstadian ideal, and this
chapter will look into this. The chapter will also look into and explore three strategies
used by queer Sami in breaking the silence and gaining more visibility in Sápmi.
Heteronormativity in Sápmi
Queer theorist Tiina Rosenberg writes that norms are unspoken and invisible until
someone breaks them (Rosenberg, 2002: 101). Through studying the silence, and the
more physical and verbal forms of sanctions that queer Sami receive from the center,
the previous chapter revealed the central position of heteronormativity in Sápmi.
Heteronormativity is the perception that heterosexuality is normal (Rosenberg, 2002),
and as heteronormativity operates within a binary understanding of gender, it is also
regulative for norms connected to gender. For instance, if a cis-man28 dresses in a way
that is seen by his surroundings as feminine, he risks being sanctioned for not
confirming the heteronormative expectation.
Heteronormativity intersects with other systems of norms and is connected to ideals.
Queer theorist Tiina Rosenberg writes that ideals are created by the intersection of
different norm systems, and are therefore reflections of what society perceives as
normal. By confirming the norms connected to the ideal, the individuals are perceived
as normal by society. As the individual risks being sanctioned for not confirming the
The term cisgender was introduced as a way to refer to those who are not
transgender without resorting to words like ”biological” or ”regular” (Marinucci, 2010: 125).
28
52
norms or ideal that are made up by others than the individual, Rosenberg also
underlines that normality is a question of power (Rosenberg, 2002), and this power is
most often located in the center (hooks, 1989).
My informants have been concerned about two ideals in particular: the masculine
ideal for Sami men and the Christian/læstadian ideal. Heteronormativity seems to be a
central norm that is connected to these two ideals, and the silence and the physical
and verbal sanctions that queer Sami receive from the center must therefore also be
seen in connection with the queer Sami not confirming this ideals.
The masculine ideal
There is this old expectation that you should be a man of nature, you know. That
you should spend a lot of time outside, preferably have reindeer and be out on the
tundra, herding them. And you should also be a macho man who doesn’t relate to
his feelings.
-Andreas
This is Andreas’ description of the ideal Sami man, or the stereotype, as he refers to it. The norms connected to Andreas’ description of this ideal, that is, to be a man of nature, to have reindeers, be macho and not relate to feelings, point at two aspects of
this ideal. Firstly, the Sami man is expected to perform his gender in a way that is
seen as masculine in Sápmi, and, secondly, this masculine ideal seems to be
connected to reindeer herding. When Andreas talks about this ideal he says that he
doesn't let it affect him much, “I don’t care that much about it”, he says. But at a later point in our interview, he also starts talking about how he is conscious about not
dressing or appearing too feminine in Sami settings, and he says: “I am putting
prestige into the fact that no-one can see that I am gay from my appearance.”
Mikke, who did not identify with the gender assigned to him at birth, had just been
through the last surgery in his gender-correcting process when we met up for our
interview. His process of transitioning from female to male did not only involve the
transition of gender, but also his ethnicity. It is only a few years ago that Mikke
53
discovered that he had Sami ancestors, and that some of his family members still also
speak Sami. The generations before him experienced stigmatization and shame
connected to the Sami identity, and his parents therefore raised him as Norwegian.
When Mikke were to change his first name, he therefore also decided to change his
last name into the family last name of Sami origin, and by doing so also reclaiming
his Sami identity. He also signed up for a Sami language course. He says “When I first were to start all over, I was r-e-a-l-l-y going to start all over. And I actually feel
like a better man as a Sami man.” Mikke’s description of the Sami man has many
similarities to the one by Andreas, but while Andreas expresses that he does not care
about this ideal, Mikke is idealizing it.
Mikke: A Sami man is strong and steady and he has a lot of wisdom. He knows a
lot about his family and the traditions, and he is very clear about how stuff is
supposed to be, he knows that stuff should be like this or that.
AH: But is he more masculine than the Norwegian man?
Mikke: Yes! He has rough working hands, and he is calm and takes life with
devastating peace, because he has full control of everything, actually. And when I
see a typical Norwegian working man, he is stressed and very ... well, he is not
present in his own head at times. I'm more like the Sami man. I think you are much
more self-restrained and in control as a Sami man. I think you can handle many
things at once as a Sami man, and then of course, I think about the reindeer
herders. A reindeer herding Sami, a man that herds reindeer, has to keep control
over many reindeer at once, and no matter how stressed the reindeer might be, you
know, they still manage it, and…it even looks easy! And then, if you throw in a Norwegian man into that, and he is supposed to do just half of the job, he will get
stressed and he won’t know where to start and stuff like that. And I think it is like in regards of farmers, and in more common working places too, that a Sami man is
stronger and steadier, a guy with full control! And then, the Norwegian man, I
know a couple of Norwegian men like that, who are a bit too stressed;; they don’t manage to get control of the things happening around them and it is just too much
54
stress. They stress too much! There is no point in stressing. Just take it easy! It’s going to be okay. It’s a bit like that, I think. That’s how I see it.
-Mikke
Mikke’s ideal of the Sami man is also connected to masculine norms. He also connects these norms and the expected masculine performance of the Sami man to
qualities needed within the reindeer husbandry. The ideal of the masculine man is put
in a binary opposition to the Norwegian man, and through ascribing the ideal of the
Sami man masculine qualities, like being self-restrained and always in control, the
ideal of the Norwegian man is feminized and therefore also confirms the ideal of the
masculine Sami man.
When the queer Sami break the silence, who dares to break it and not reveals the
invisibility of queer Sami men, especially in the areas that are connected to reindeer
heading, like Karasjok and Kautokeino. Andreas, who is from a sea-Sami area, says
that he would think twice before telling someone that he is gay if he travels to
Karasjok and Kautokeino. He says: “To put it like that, I don't know of any gay men
in Kautokeino.” In the area that he is from, however, he says it is “popping up gays
everywhere these days.”
Two of my male informants are from the inland, Chris who defines himself as
pansexual transsexual and Lemet who defines himself as gay or queer. Chris
challenges most of the norms connected to gender and sexuality in Sápmi, as he has
defined himself as both a heterosexual, bisexual and lesbian girl, and when we meet
up for our interview he had just had his first meeting with Rikshospitalet to get sexcorrecting surgery. But Chris had already moved out of the village he was from when
he started his travel through his different sexuality and gender identities. In a
documentary that is recently made about Chris he stated that his family in the south
had been most supportive 29 . In our interview he said that at least his family in
Finnmark had not disowned him. Lemet, who has lived in Karasjok as openly gay,
has, as Chapter 3 shows, experienced many sanctions for it. As the first open gay in
his village, he felt he had to move to Oslo to seek “asylum” because of all the 29
www.altaposten.no/lokalt/Nett-tv/article10184231.ece (01.12.2014)
55
sanctions. By being open about his homosexual orientation, but also by doing his
gender in a very feminine way, he does not confirm the masculine ideal described by
Andreas and Mikke, and he is therefore sanctioned for it. The lack of openly queer
men in inner Finnmark can therefore be explained by the fear of the sanctions one
risks to get by doing their gender performance in a way that is seen as feminine.
Lemet also relates this to the reindeer husbandry.
I think it is especially difficult to come out for Sami within the reindeer husbandry,
where you have to prove physical strength to be seen as masculine. If you are
feminine or gay in such an environment, you are easily seen as weak.
-Lemet
Lemet also says that in Kautokeino there are a lot of lesbians but no gay men,
something that also can be explained by this masculine ideal. A gay or queer man’s gender performance can be seen as feminine, while a woman with a lesbian masculine
performance seems to be more accepted. Informant Anna is born and raised in
Kautokeino, and I have been in contact with three other lesbians from this area who
are born or who live there. One of them replied my email by questioning the value of
her participation if my research, as she did not find it difficult at all to live openly as a
lesbian in Kautokeino.
The Christian/læstadian ideal
Another system of norms that support the ruling position of heteronormativity in
Sápmi is connected to Christianity, and læstadianism in particular. Three of my
informants talked about breaking the norms connected to the læstadian faith, and
being sanctioned for it.
Sven says he “grew up with parents who were læstadian, and his dad also was a leading figure in Jehovah witnesses”. When Sven came out as gay in the early 80s, he
was not only sanctioned with their non-acceptance, but his dad, described by Sven as
a man who because of his religious view had a very fundamentalist views on
sexuality, also threatened to send him to a clinic in the US to have him “corrected”. Sven says that he had to acknowledge that “that man was dangerous for me”, and he 56
had therefore moved to Oslo at the age of 16 to be able to live as he is.
Anna does not tell about any sanctions in verbal or physical forms, but she has been
sanctioned through silence for being gay by her family, which she also explains with
norms connected to Christian values, and læstadian in particular. Just like Sven, she
felt that she had to move away from her family in the geographical Sápmi to be able
to live openly as gay in the south. The first years after she came out, she had little
contact with her family, but over the last years, the contact has increased and she now
travels more often to the north to see them. She is also bringing her wife with her. She
expresses that social settings with a Christian framing are the most challenging setting
for her to be in, for instance church weddings. By being present at such settings with
her wife she often feels uncomfortable, especially if they both wear guakti. She says
that “I feel like I am too confrontational”, something that is not “in the Sami culture”,
as Anna states in the quote in Chapter 3. The parties after the weddings can also be
uncomfortable for her and the wife, as they get confronted by the silence of those who
don't accept them, in terms of people who don't shake their hands, like one is
supposed to do at Sami weddings. After years without much contact with her family,
Anna took a spontaneous road trip with her wife to the north to visit her family. She
was very nervous to meet her læstadian grandparents again, whom she had not seen
for years or spoken much too after she came out. She was surprised by how warmly
she was welcomed. Most læstadians have conservative views on sexuality, and sexual
relationships are limited to men and women after marriage. In some areas in Sápmi,
the gender roles are also set in terms of specific codes of dressing and chores for men
and women. The strategy used by Anna’s grandparents to cope with her lesbian sexuality was simply to refer to her wife as “he” and give her chores meant for men, for instance mowing the lawn.
Mikke has also experienced sanctions from close family members, which he connects
to læstadian values. His family has been supportive in his transition, as he now lives
as a heterosexual man. But before he transitioned he did not experience the same
support. As a lesbian girl he was sanctioned with periods that he experienced as
exclusion from his family, and by family members he was verbally sanctioned by
sentences that started with “the Bible says”.
Mikke connects the sanctions he
received as a lesbian girl to the læstadian faith of his family members. His
57
experiences of being sanctioned for not living up to the expectations and norms
connected to the læstadian faith have affected him so much that he has tattooed Jesus
on his arm. The tattoo is of Jesus’s face, suffering in pain. But when he twists his arm, the other side of his face looks humble. It is symbolizing both the pain and the
spiritual refuge that Christianity has brought Mikke, but it is the suffering side of
Jesus’s face that is most visible and Mikke expresses anger for the sanctions he were given by his family back when he was a lesbian girl. He recently went on a excursion
with his family to Marthajevri in Karesuando to visit Læstadius old house, were he
got upset and angry about the joy they expressed about being in the same rooms as he
once had been present. “I don’t understand why they want to show off his house to
others like that”, he says. For Mikke it was not a joyful experience to be there, as he
was reminded of the pain. As he said: “It felt like they were proud to have had him
there. Oh, this is Lars Levi Læstadius house, one of those who brought the pain on us,
come have a look!”.
That the queer Sami breaks with the norms of the læstadian ideal, both in terms of
sexuality and gender, is also an explanation on the silence in itself. After Sven’s participation in the panel discussion, he wrote a blog post called “Why are you so
silent Sápmi?”. A response to this post came from a Sami woman that wrote “You know we don't talk about sex life in Sápmi, Sven!”. In our interview Sven asked: “Why does it always have to be about sex life when we talk about gay people?”. Acknowledging the existence of, or talking about someone being gay, does not have
to involve talking about their sex life. But being in a relationship with or being
married to someone of the same sex does however challenge the norms connected to
the læstadian gender roles, as the story of Anna showed.
Strategies
Stefan Mikaelsson’s strategy to change “the masculine norm”
“ A queer person is a person who is questioning the ruling norms, and who also question the patriarchal society which I believe we live in. The patriarchy makes
women suffer the most, but it also makes men suffer and maybe most of all the
young men.”
58
“Young men are submissive to a norm that is not created for young Sami men, and I don't think that all of them want to subjugate to the norm either, and that they feel
bad about doing it. But no one has told them or made them realize that it actually
might not be a good thing that everyone should be and do the same.”
-Stefan
Stefan Mikaelsson is the only of my informants who lives on the Swedish side of
Sápmi. He is also problematizing the masculine ideal, or the “masculine norm” as he refers to it, but unlike my informants on the Norwegian side, he does not connect this
ideal to reindeer husbandry, but rather to what he sees as a “patriarchal Swedish society”. Patriarchy is a social structure that grants priority to what is male or masculine over what is seen as female or feminine (Marinucci, 2010: 131). Stefan is
in particularly problematizing what he sees as “the manly norm”, which he sees as produced by the patriarchal Swedish society and imposed on and internalized by Sami
men.
Stefan claims that this masculine norm is not made for Sami men, and he is especially
worried about the young Sami men internalizing it. He express that he worries about
young Sami men not being told that there is an alternative to this norm, and that they
can choose not confirming the masculine expectation in Sápmi. Stefan’s strategy is to show these young men that there is an alternative, and he is doing it through, in
Butlerian terms, his gender performance. As the major of the Sami Parliament in
Sweden, Stefan has a power position which he can use to show the young Sami men
an alternative, something he does in terms of using his position as a platform to
express his political opinions through words. But most importantly, he shows the
alternative by the way he performs his gender. Wearing nail polish and stockings to
his traditional Sami national dress for men, the guakti, is something that is not in line
with the expectations of how a Sami man should dress and perform his gender, and as
seen in previous chapter. Stefan gets sanctioned for this through silence. Lately, he
has also started to use make up at his public appearances. When Stefan wears nail
polish, stockings and make up to his guakti at public events where he is participates
and represents his role and position as the Sami major, his queer appearance at such
arenas is challenging the man’s role;; Stefan is being true to who he is and performs 59
his gender in line with it. Stefan started to identify as queer after he found the term by
searching online, and through this identity, he says, he was enabled to question the
norms both on a personal and on a political level. But his newly discovered queer
identity also enables him to dress and perform his gender in a way that challenges
these norms, something he is very conscious about. As he says himself: “As
politicians we can participate in as many demonstrations and manifestations as we
like, for instance, we should take a stand to the violence against women, but nothing
is changed before we change the norm.”
Queer theorist Henning Beck writes that the strategy of queers is to undermine and
destabilize the heterosexual order and its binary understanding of gender (Beck, 2003:
116). Kari Jegerstadt writes that Butler shares Foucault’s view on discourses and the relation between discourse and power. Judith Butler emphasizes that the power that
operates discursively is not only regulative, but also productive. When sexuality and
identity are subject to a discursive regulation, it also produces understandable,
conceptualized forms of sexuality and gender (Jegerstad, 2008: 2). According to
Butler, gender is performed and gives meaning within the frames of these discourses.
The socially constructed concepts of “men” and “women” are also produced and understood through repetition of the gender performances within these frames (Butler,
1990). By repetition of queer gender performances within a discourse that has a
heteronormative framing, it can therefore be possible, as Beck writes, to undermine
and destabilize the heterosexual order, and thereby change the norms. This seems to
be in line with Stefan’s strategy and goal. Stefan strategy should also be seen as a strategy of decolonization. Indigenous
decolonization is connected to questioning or rejecting what one has been assimilated
into, and finding strategies to go back to what’s been lost under the colonial rule
(Tuhiwai Smith, 2012). Stefan is questioning the masculine norms in Sápmi; as he
sees the masculine expectation in Sápmi as something imposed by the values of the
Swedish patriarchal society, his strategy to change this should also be seen as a
decolonization strategy. His queer gender appearance is a decolonization strategy that
aims to change the masculine norms for Sami men and thereby affect or change the
masculine ideal in Sápmi.
60
Two spirits as a decolonization strategy
“ We have the key, we have the key! ”
-Queer Sami from Finland
I wish to return to the discussion of two-spirits, as identifying with the two-spirit
identity and its movement, also can be seen as a decolonization strategy, in terms of
rejecting norms and values that are seen as imposed from the State, through
assimilation policies or through missionary work. Only one of my informants, Stefan
Mikaelsson, used the term decolonization at our interview, but several of my
informants talked about the non-acceptance and ostracism of queer Sami or the
silence that mediates this, as resulting from imposed norms and values from nonindigenous outsiders, through assimilation policies or missionary work. Identifying
with the two-spirit movement, should therefore in line with this, be seen as a
decolonization strategy.
At my fieldwork in Umeå, I heard the Finnish queer Sami who identifies as two-spirit,
and who was quoted in Chapter 2, repeat several times: We have the key, we have the
key! This was said by this person in plenum, who encouraged the present queer Sami
to embrace their two-spirit identities and with it the role as “the ones who can see more”. From the context that this was stated, I understand that this person sees queer Sami as key holders to the spiritual world. Several of the queer Sami voiced in
Chapter 2, connect their queerness to the spiritual world, and two of the queer Sami
voiced in this thesis also say they believe that the noaidies were gay in the earlier
days. Other queer Sami voiced in this chapter say that they believe Sápmi was more
open for queers before the missionaries brought Christianity and assimilation policies
were enforced by the Norwegian State. Through identifying as two-spirits, queer Sami
also hold the key to decolonizing from the sexuality and gender norms that they see as
enforced by Christianity and the process and assimilation. Identifying with the twospirit term and the movement should therefore be seen as a decolonization strategy.
The two-spirit term was coined due to an indigenous need to reject the sexuality and
gender-norms enforced by the colonizing powers in the US and Canada. By the
coining of the term, the two-spirit movement rejected the binary thinking of the West
61
and the heteronormative framing on sexuality and gender that this thinking gives and
enforces on their communities. The movement aims, in Andrea Smith’s words, at decolonizing from “the heteronormativity of settler colonialism” (Smith, 2010) and in
doing this “reclaiming, regaining and restoring what has been lost under colonial rule” (Driskill on Cherokee two-spirits, 2011: 110-11). On behalf of this, queer Sami
identifying with the two-spirit term and its movement should be seen as a form of
resistance to heteronormativity in Sápmi, and as a strategy to decolonize from it.
Through identifying with the two-spirit movement, queer Sami also have the key to
re-imagine their queer indigenous bodies as they decolonize it. Native queer theorist
Chris Finley writes that the reclaiming of the two-spirit identity is all about reimagining the queer Native body. He quotes Justin Timberlake, saying it’s all about
“bringing sexy back”, but as Finley remind us with the words of Prince: “sexy never left” (Finley, 2011: 41). Queer Native scholar Daniel Heath Justice writes about his
journey to fully embrace and take pleasure in his queer body and sexuality. He simply
suggest dropping all shame and taking pleasure and joy in the body and in relation to
others, as a strategy of decolonization. He writes “to ignore sex and embodied pleasure in the case of Indigenous liberation is to ignore one of our greatest recourses.
It is to deny us one of our greatest gifts”. As he puts it: “Every orgasm can be an act of decolonization” (Justice in Taylor, 2008: 106).
Indigenous scholar Linda Tuhiwai Smiths asks us to pay attention to the fact that
indigenous histories often have been written by the pen of the colonizer. In a process
of decolonizing it is therefore important to ask what’s been left out of history, or hisstory, as she underlines what the word actually means (Tuhiwai Smith, 1999). She
writes that “negation of indigenous view of history was a critical part of asserting
colonial ideology, partly because such views were regarded as clearly “primitive” and “incorrect” and mostly because they challenged and resisted the mission of colonialism” (Tuhiwai Smith, 1999: 29). Tuhiwai Smith’s arguments open up for questioning what’s been left out of the writing of Sami history. I have not succeeded in finding any queer appearances in the old sources I’ve been looking through at the Indigenous and Sami department at the library at UiT, but as Marianne Giertsen was
quoted in Chapter 2 “even if no known sources can prove that homosexuality has
been institutionalized and legitimized in Sápmi, it does not mean that same-sex
62
sexuality has not been present” (Giertsen, 2002: 14). The same applied to queer
gender appearances. The first extensive sources on Sami culture and religion date
back to the writings of the first missionaries who arrived in Sápmi in the late 17th
century (Hætta, 2002), and in line with Tuhiwai Smith’s argument, one can question
if the missionaries left out what they condemned. Tuhiwai Smith also writes that
Indigenous history that is written through the colonizing pen is written and
constructed around binary categories (Tuhiwai Smith, 2012: 32). This also opens up
for questioning if the earlier sources left out what they did not see. According to
Derrida, what is seen as different, not identical and discernible to the rest of a group
often appears as invisible from a Western binary perspective. Derrida terms this
invisible position as différence (Derrida in Sandoval, 200:147). With this term Derrida
underlines and criticizes the Western binary thought for not acknowledging difference
within groups. Sandoval draws on Derrida when emphasizing that the différence is
invisible in itself, as exposure of différence within the frames of the binary Western
thought can cause the whole system to collapse (Derrida in Sandoval, 2000: 150). One
can therefore question if the missionaries and the outsiders who wrote the earliest
sources on Sami history left out the queer gender appearances in Sápmi, as queer
Sami and their position as différence might have been invisible from a perspective
framed by the heteronormative Western binary.
Through identifying with the two-spirit identity and movement, queer Sami find a
source of empowerment. This opens up for a re-imagining of the queer Sami body
that enables queer Sami to re-imagine their roles from the past, even if there are no
written sources on it. As Tuhiwai Smith writes, “telling our stories from the past,
reclaiming the past, giving testimony to the past are all strategies which are
commonly employed by indigenous people struggling for justice” (Tuhiwai Smith, 1999: 34-5). The re-imagining of the queer Sami body that is connected to the past
therefore enables queer Sami to reclaim their roles in the present. Through the
reclaiming of such roles, queer Sami reclaim their rights to define outside of the
heteronormative binary in the present, and to be given the space to do it. The question
is however whether an English term, a term from an “outsider’s” language, can open up for the inclusion and acceptance that is needed on the “inside”, or from the center, in Sápmi where the majority speaks and relates to the Sami/Scandinavian languages
as their heart languages.
63
Bonju
“We were talking about reviving forgotten words, we were talking about creating new vocabularies for ourselves, so that we can discuss and talk about ourselves. It
is incredibly important that a language is alive, vivid and thriving. We did not force
or try to get back to what we have lost, we just sat down thinking that, ok, it is nice
to have words for queer in Norwegian, Swedish or Finnish. But if we decide just to
use them, then we miss an important point, because obviously these words do exist
in a way in our languages, we just need to find them, rediscover them.”
-Queer Sami, Umeå
“ Bonju. It is important for me to lift this word in the Sami communities. Not just to inform people that we exist, but also demand to be accepted.”
-Lemet
The artist, writer, editor and art curator Harmony Hammond criticized the invisibility
of lesbian artist in the 1970s and in her call for more lesbian presence within the field
of art she wrote;; “to name is to make present. If you do dot name, you do not have a
cultural history, and if you do not have a cultural history, you do not exist” (Hammond in Motta and Motta, 2011: 82). The same goes in regard of queer Sami.
At my fieldwork in Umeå, the need to name who they are, and the need of a term,
preferably in the Sami languages was addressed at the workshop that I took part in, in
connection to the release of the Queering Sápmi book. The participants at this
workshop were queer Sami, their family members, supporters and queer allies from
the three Scandinavian countries in Sápmi, and we were divided into groups to
discuss and map the needs of queer Sami. The quote above is from the presentations
of the group discussion of queer Sami and their family members, presented in plenum
for the rest of the workshop participants. The group addressed a need for terms that
describe who they are in their own indigenous languages. The quote also shows that
they believe that there once have been such terms in the Sami languages, terms that
have been lost, silenced. Languages are rooted in culture, and to rediscover or recreate such terms can therefore be helpful for queer Sami in claiming their space and
acceptance in the Sami communities, a strategy to break the silence. As Audre Lorde
64
writes: “give name to the nameless, so it can be heard” ( Lorde in Sandoval,!2000:!1).
The term two-spirit is a term in English, and it is therefore questionable if the center
will accept this term from the margin. As the quote from my fieldwork in Umeå
shows, there is a lack of words for “queer” in the Sami languages, and for the Sami
who speak Sami as their first languages, such words can therefore appear as words
from the “outside”. If the queer Sami margin can present words to the center that are
rooted in their languages, this can be a strategy to gain visibility, acceptance and their
space in the “inside”. One of my informants, Lemet, has found his own solution to
this. He identify as bonju. Bonju is a word in north-Sami that is directly translated
from the Norwegian word for queer, skeiv. In Norwegian, this means bent or oblique,
as a binary word to straight. In the article I wrote on Lemet for Gaysir, called “Bonju
and proud”, he talks about how he uses this word to gain more visibility in Sami
communities. It is his strategy to break the silence. Lemet is using Facebook actively
in this, where he has his own page called “Bonju news and happenings”. Here he
shares news and events that are related to queer Sami. He also shares pictures and his
personal and political opinions on the north-Sami language. Of my eight informants,
Lemet is the only one who used or talked about the term bonju. As my interviews
were conducted in Norwegian, it is however, possible that some of the informants use
the word in Sami. At my fieldwork in Umeå, I heard the word being used by others
then Lemet.
Through using and introducing the non-queer Sami to the word bonju, or other words
in the Sami languages, queer Sami use the power of language to claim their space in
the Sami communities. Languages are linked to culture, and terms in other languages
can therefore create distance, which a term in the indigenous language can serve to
erase. When Lemet is introducing the non-queer Sami to a term describing who he is
in his indigenous language, he is also including himself into the language that is
rooted in his culture. It is therefore an efficient strategy not only in gaining visibility,
but also in gaining acknowledgement and acceptance from the center.
The term bonju has clear parallels to other queer indigenous people who have claimed
their space in their communities through their indigenous languages. The takatāpui,
queer Maories, in New Zealand are one such example. The word takatāpui originates
!
65!
in the indigenous te Reo Maori language, and it originally means “intimate friendship”, but it has come to take on a new meaning in the recent 20-25 years, and is
now recognized as the word for “intimate relationship with same sex” (Murray: 2003). The Canadian anthropologist David A. B. Murray, who specializes on queer
Maori men, writes that he has noticed an increased use of the term takatāpui in Maori
daily life conversations. He sees this as a result of the word being more used in Maori
media, and the growth of a takatāpui literature. But despite of this, Murray also notes
that the majority of Maori men with a homosexual orientation still prefer to use the
English words gay or homosexual about themselves. The Maori people constitute
15% of the national population in New Zealand, but as a result of assimilation policies
only 4-8% of the Maori population speak te Reo Maori fluently (Murray: 2003).
Murray writes that by using the term takatāpui, queer Maori also communicate that
they speak te Reo Maori, and some therefore choose not to use this term. Murray
notes that the term can therefore also appear as excluding for the queer Maori who do
not speak the language. The Sami have, just like the Maori, been exposed to
assimilation policies with the result that many Sami today don’t master the Sami languages. Bonju therefore runs the same risk as takatāpui: to appear as excluding for
those who do not master the indigenous Sami languages.
What both bonju and takatāpui share, however, is the political value in a term that
points out their intersectional position, as the terms communicate both queerness and
indigenous identity. Through identifying as bonju or takatāpui, and by confronting the
center with these terms, the position and the voices in the margin will become more
visible in both queer and indigenous political and social settings.
By claiming or re-claiming terms in indigenous languages, queer indigenous people
are enabled to define on their own conditions. Murray draws on Roscoe who refers to
the two-spirit movement and emphasizes that English words for sexual identifications
like gay, lesbian, bisexual are not terms rooted in the indigenous languages, and the
intent of these terms does mot necessarily represent who they are (Roscoe in Murray,
2003: 236). The term bonju is coined by queer Sami in the Sami language, and not by
outsiders, and is therefore based on queer indigenous conditions. But as the term
bonju is a translation of a the Norwegian word for queer, it also differs from the term
two-spirit that was coined as a critique of the Western binary thought. The term queer
66
also risk reinforcing the binary thinking it is meant to be a critique of, with its
opposition to heteronormativity. In line with this, it can be argued that the term bonju
also reinforces this binary. The term can also appear as excluding for the queer Sami
who don’t master the north-Sami language, just like the term takatāpui can do for the
queer Maori not mastering the te Reo Maori language. A positive aspect of the term
bonju is however, as shared with the term takatāpui but not the term two-spirit, that it
is in an indigenous language. A term in the indigenous Sami language, which the
majority of the Sami speak, can be a powerful strategy to gain visibility and to break
the silence in Sápmi.
Summary
This chapter has investigated what was revealed when the queer Sami voices in this
thesis broke the silence. The chapter has discussed the central position of
heteronormativity and two ideals that it supports, the masculine ideal for men and the
Christian/læstadian ideal. This does not mean that heteronormativity does not support
other ideals in Sápmi, but that the two ideals in particular was highlighted by my
informants. This chapter have also revealed and discussed three strategies in breaking
the silence and in gaining more visibility and acceptance in Sápmi. This is Stefan
Mikaelsson personal strategy to change the masculine ideal, identifying with the twospirit movement as a decolonization strategy and the coining of the term “bonju” in the Sami language.
67
Chapter five:
Conclusive remarks
While writing this thesis
This thesis has investigated the silence of queerness in Sápmi. When I set out to do
my fieldworks and interviews in 2013, the silence was far more present than it is
today. In the last year, while writing this thesis, I’ve got to witness a great gained visibility of queer Sami, both inside and outside of Sápmi. The silence has been
broken in many ways, in the margin and in the center in Sápmi, but also outside of
Sápmi’s borders. The debate at Pride House was arranged just a few moths before the election at the Norwegian Sami Parliament. After participating at this debate, Sven
Henriksen wrote his blog post “Why are you so silent Sápmi?”, that got response from a central politician, Kirsti Guvsám for NSR, Norske Samers Riksforbund (Norwegian
Sámi Association). On her blog Guvsám encouraged the center to break the silence,
and she also showed her support of queer Sami in a press release, where she stated
that homophobia should not be accepted in Sápmi. NSR got the mandate at the
election, and the elected Sami Parliament president, Aili Keskitalo, representing NSR,
honored the work of queer Sami at her New Year speech the same year. The
following summer, in 2014, I participated at the indigenous Riddu Riddu festival in
Manndalen where the Sami Parliament’s stand was represented by a lavvo that was
covered in a rainbow flag. The gained visibility of queer Sami should first and
foremost be seen in connection with the work of Queering Sápmi and the release of
their book, which has empowered queer Sami to raise their voices from the margin.
The Queering Sápmi project is receiving media attention both inside and outside of
Sápmi, and my Sami friend who back in 2012 claimed that queer Sami doesn’t exist is today frequently e-mailing me articles on their work. Queering Sápmi also recently, in
October 2014, arranged the first Sami Pride in history in Kiruna, in the Swedish
geographical Sápmi. The first queer Sami organization, Queer Sámit, was also
founded at this event.
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What did the silence hide? Implementation of theory and findings
This thesis has questioned what the silence in Sápmi hides, and in seeking answers to
this I have aimed at integrating queer theory in my work. For me as a researcher this
has entailed keeping a critical approach towards heteronormativity and binary
thinking in my writing. I have been enabled and found support in this by the work of
queer theorists, or scholars who also aim to integrate a queer theoretical approach in
their work. In doing this, I have drawn on the work on scholars such as Judith Butler,
Jacques Derrida, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwic, Arnfinn Andersen and Tiina Rosenberg. I
have also used, and especially valued, the work of Native scholars who integrate
queer theoretical approaches in their work, such as Chris Finley, Andrea Smith, Scott
Lauria Morgensen, Qwo-Li Driskill, and Daniel Heath Justice.
I have also used the work of the black feminist scholars bell hooks and Audre Lorde
in my work. Through this, and especially through bell hooks terms “margin” and “center”, I have been able to analyze the intersectional position of queer Sami. The privilege is located in the center, which locates minorities in the margin. In regard to
queer Sami, this is placing queer Sami on the margin both in the queer community
and in Sápmi. When media write about queer Sami, the term “double minority” is often used. Marianne Giertsen’s article, which I have also used in this thesis, use the
term “minority within a minority”. I used the term “double minority” in several of my interviews, and asked my informants if they found it problematic to be in such a
position, but the informants who were asked this question all answered that it was not
something they think much about or problematize in their daily lives. Informant
Andreas did for instance tell me that he rather sees it as a source of double pride
rather then something problematic.
What all of my informants have in common is that they today are proud to be who
they are. But when analyzing the silence and the different aspects of it, the
intersectional perspective and the terms center and margin proved to be more efficient
terms to use as analytical tools than double minority or minority within minority.
Through the intersectional perspective, and bell hooks’ terms “center” and “margin” in particular, I was enabled to highlight that the silence is more present in the margin
69
in Sápmi than in the queer community. Through queer theorist Judith Butler’s focus on sanctions I was also enabled to put this in connection to the negative sanctions
from the center, and through this also highlighted that negative sanctions are given
from the center to the margin to a higher extent in Sápmi than in the queer
community.
The intersectional perspective acknowledges that different streets of oppression meet
in the intersectional crossroads of the individual. This means that if queer Sami are
sanctioned for being Sami in the queer community, it must be seen in connection with
the Sami’s positions as ethnic minorities, and that the racism streets therefore cross in their intersectional crossroads. If queer Sami are sanctioned for being queer in Sápmi,
this must be seen in connection with the heteronormativity street crossing the
intersectional crossroads of queer Sami, too. However, the queer Sami who break the
silence in this thesis reveal that they are first and foremost sanctioned in Sápmi and
not in the queer community. The interviews with my informants also reveal that the
silence in Sápmi can be seen as a sanction in itself, as it mediates non-acceptance and
ostracism. These were the different aspects of the silence that were investigated in
Chapter 3, and also revealed that heteronormativity stands strong in Sápmi.
Heteronormativity intersects with other systems of norms, and is connected to ideals.
Chapter four investigated what was revealed when queer Sami broke the silence, and
through the voices of my informants, this chapter could reveal that heteronormativity
supports two ideals in particular in Sápmi. This is the masculine ideal and the
Christian/læstadian ideal. This means that queer Sami are not only sanctioned for not
confirming heteronormativity alone, but also for not confirming the ideals that
heteronormativity as a norm system is connected to.
Chapter 3 also revealed three strategies in breaking the silence and in gaining more
visibility in Sápmi. One of these strategies is to identify with the two-spirit
movement, a strategy that Chapter 2 also investigated. Chapter 2 showed that there
are no written sources on queer Sami appearances, at least none that I have found. The
two-spirit movement originated and emerged in indigenous contexts in US and
Canada, but through the memberships in the international indigenous imagined
community, queer Sami are enabled to identify with this movement. Identifying with
70
the two-spirit movement also opens up for queer Sami to re-imagine the queer Sami
body and their roles in Sami history. And, as Chapter 2 also shows, several of the
queer Sami voices in this thesis believe that it hasn’t always been as silent in Sápmi. When Chapter 4 picks up on the two-spirit discussion again, I also argue that
identifying with the two-spirit movement can be seen as a strategy of decolonization,
and I argue this on behalf of the queer Sami voices in Chapter 2 stating that they
believe they weren’t as invisible in Sápmi before assimilation policies and Christianization. Chapter 4 also investigated the personal strategy of Stefan
Mikaelsson to decolonize from the masculine ideal and the use of the term “bonju” in the north-Sami language to gain more visibility in Sápmi.
Conclusion
To conclude, the silence in Sápmi has been hiding the following; Through the
international indigenous imagined community queer Sami are enabled to mirror in,
and identify with indigenous people who reject the gender binary and don’t confirm heteronormativity, like the two-spirit movement in the US and Canada. Through this
queer Sami are also enabled to claim, or in Chris Finley’s words, re-imagine their
queer indigenous body and its historical position. The queer Sami voiced in chapter
two believes that the queer Sami body has been more visible in Sápmi historically,
and that it has not always have been as silent as it is today.
The silence in Sápmi today has many aspects. Firstly, the silence is more present in
the margin in Sápmi then in the queer community. In the margin in Sápmi there are
also queer Sami who are completely silent, and not out of the closet. The silence in
Sápmi can be seen as a cultural trait, and not being confrontational also seems to be a
expectation in Sápmi. However, this also points to that queerness is something to be
confrontational about. The silence from the center in Sápmi mediates non-acceptance
and ostracism, and should therefore also be seen as a sanction. There are also stories
about more physical, verbal and violent sanctions that queer Sami has received for
being queer, something that also points out the central position of heteronormativity
in Sápmi.
71
When the queer Sami in this thesis broke the silence, two ideals that are supported by
heteronormativity were also revealed and investigated. These are the masculine ideal
for men and the Christian/læstadian ideal. This does not mean that heteronormativity
does not support other ideals in Sápmi, but that these two ideals in particular that was
highlighted by my informants. This thesis has also revealed and discussed three
strategies in breaking the silence and in gaining more visibility and acceptance in
Sápmi. This is identifying with the two-spirit movement as a decolonization strategy,
Stefan Mikaelsson personal strategy to change the masculine ideal and finally, the
coining of the term “bonju” in the Sami language. 72
Appendix: List of informants
- Stefan Mikaelsson, heterosexual and queer Sami Parliament mayor in Sweden
- Svein Henriksen, homosexual man
- Lemet, homosexual man
- Mikke, heterosexual man, who just transitioned from woman to man
- Chris, pansexual man, who is waiting for his ftm transitional surgery
- Andreas, somewhere between gay and bisexual, man
- Anna, lesbian woman
- Lesbian woman
73
Mari Boine performing at the opening of Pride House 2013.
Photo: LLH Oslo og Akershus
Stefan Mikaelsson giving his speech at the opening of Pride House 2013.
Photo: LLH Oslo og Akershus
!
!
74!
From the debate “What is the silence in Sápmi hiding?” at Pride House 2013.
Photo: LLH Oslo og Akershus
From the debate “What is the silence in Sápmi hiding?” at Pride House 2013.
Photo: LLH Oslo og Akershus
!
!
75!
The Queer Sami flag. At the Queering Sápmi release in Umeå, Sweden, September
2013. Photo: Ane Hedvig H. Løvold
76
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